Associations between Music Therapy, Pain and Heart Rate for Children Receiving Palliative Care

Title

Associations between Music Therapy, Pain and Heart Rate for Children Receiving Palliative Care

Creator

Delaney AM; Herbert AR; Bradford N; Bernard A

Identifier

Publisher

Music Therapy Perspectives

Date

2023

Subject

Child; Child Preschool; Confidence Intervals; Convenience Sample; Descriptive Statistics; Female; Heart Rate; Human; In Infancy and Childhood; Infant; Infant Newborn; Male; Multimethod Studies; Music Therapy; Only Child; Pain; Palliative Care; Pediatric Care; Pretest-Posttest Design; Prevention and Control; Psychosocial Factors; Purposive Sample; Quality of Life; Scales; Summated Rating Scaling; Thematic Analysis; Therapy

Description

Abstract Music therapy (MT) is a widely used non-pharmacological intervention in pediatric health care, an integral part of pediatric palliative care (PPC). Yet, there is a lack of evidence of efficacy, and best practices are not well established. The nature and extent of physiologic impacts of MT in PPC have not previously been reported. This study explores how MT contributes to psycho-physiological changes in children receiving palliative care. We used a convergent mixed-methods feasibility study with a pre–post design. MT sessions were delivered to children (0–18 years), who were registered with a statewide Pediatric Palliative Care Service. Pre–post measures of pain and heart rate were collected using validated and objective measures and analyzed using mixed-model analysis. Analysis of 36 MT sessions demonstrated a statistically significant reduction in pain scores and heart rate after MT sessions. Post measures of pain measured with Face, Legs, Activity, Cry, Consolability scale (FLACC scale) scores were −1.57 (95% confidence interval [CI] −2.31 to −0.83) and by Likert pain scale −2.03 (95% CI −2.79 to −1.27). Heart rate reduced by a mean of −7.6 beats per minute (95% CI −10.74 to −3.37). Five parents participated in semi-structured interviews. Following thematic analysis, two major themes emerged: (1) MT has a positive impact on physiological symptoms and (2) MT enhances the opportunity to experience joy. Results demonstrate the feasibility of study components and may inform future research design for a larger study. This research contributes to the limited evidence about non-pharmacological interventions enhancing the quality of life for children receiving PPC.

Rights

Article information provided for research and reference use only. PedPalASCNET does not hold any rights over the resource listed here. All rights are retained by the journal listed under publisher and/or the creator(s).

Citation List Month

July List 2023

Collection

Citation

Delaney AM; Herbert AR; Bradford N; Bernard A, “Associations between Music Therapy, Pain and Heart Rate for Children Receiving Palliative Care,” Pediatric Palliative Care Library, accessed April 27, 2024, https://pedpalascnetlibrary.omeka.net/items/show/19121.