Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Research Protocols
Date Submitted: Jul 5, 2022
Date Accepted: Mar 9, 2023
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Acceptability and Feasibility of a Patient-Oriented Music Intervention to Reduce Pain in the Intensive Care: Protocol for a Randomized Crossover Pilot Trial
ABSTRACT
Background:
Many patients experience pain in the intensive care unit (ICU) despite receiving pain medication. Research has shown that music can help reduce pain. Music interventions that have been studied so far have not used music streaming to generate playlists based on patient preferences, while incorporating recommended tempo and duration. It is important that a music intervention take into consideration the expertise of ICU patients, family members, and nursing staff.
Objective:
The primary objective of this study is to: a) evaluate the acceptability and feasibility of a new patient-oriented music intervention (POMI) to reduce pain in ICU patients, and b) evaluate the feasibility of conducting a crossover randomized controlled trial (RCT) for intervention testing in the ICU. A secondary objective is to examine the preliminary efficacy of the POMI in patients able to self-report and those unable to self-report.
Methods:
A 6-month, single-blind 2x2 randomized crossover pilot trial will be used. Participating patients will undergo a sequence of two interventions: the POMI which delivers music based on patients’ preferences via headphones or music pillow for 20-30 minutes and the control intervention (CTL: headphones/pillow without music). The sequence of the interventions will be inverted with a 4-hour washout period between the 2 interventions. Timing of the interventions will be prior to a planned bed turning procedure. Twenty-four patients (12 able to self-report their pain and 12 unable to self-report) will be recruited. Patients able to self-report, family members (n=12) of patients unable to self-report and nursing staff (n=12) involved in the bed turning procedure will be invited to complete a short questionnaire on the acceptability of the POMI. Data will also be collected on the feasibility of the intervention delivery and research methods throughout the study duration, and on pain intensity and distress before and after intervention delivery.
Results:
Recruitment and data collection began in March 2022 and are ongoing.
Conclusions:
Methodological strengths and limitations are discussed. Limitations of this study include the lack of blinding for patients able to self-report. Strengths include the cross-over RCT design. Clinical Trial: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05320224
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