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  4. Complementary and alternative medical interventions for the management of anxiety in parents of children who are hospitalized and suffer from a malignancy: a systematic review of RCTs
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Complementary and alternative medical interventions for the management of anxiety in parents of children who are hospitalized and suffer from a malignancy: a systematic review of RCTs

Journal
European Journal of Integrative Medicine
Date Issued
February 2014
Author(s)
Raftopoulos, Vasilios  
Charalambous, Andreas  
Papastavrou, Evridiki  
Tsitsi, Theologia  
DOI
10.1016/j.eujim.2013.09.004
Abstract
Introduction: This paper reports the findings of a systematic review which evaluates the evidence from RCTs regarding the effectiveness of
complementary and alternative medical interventions (CAM) in reducing anxiety in parents whose children suffer from malignancies.
Method: CINAHL, COCHRANE, EMBASE, PUBMED, SCOPUS and PSYCINFO electronic databases were searched, based on the following
search terms: parent*, child*, anxiety, complementary, psychological, cognitive, behavioral, interventions, cancer, leukemia, lymphoma, ‘brain
tumors’.
Results: In total 9 studies met the eligibility criteria. Six RCT’s were pilot studies. Five trials targeted parents of children undergoing bone marrow
transplantation, two studies targeted parents of children with various cancer diagnoses and two others targeted parents of children with leukemia.
A variety of stress reduction techniques were reported. Overall, 5/9 of the studies reported the use of massage therapy. In two out of the five studies
which used massage therapy on children as an intervention, massage was accompanied with relaxation/imagery in the first and in the second,
parents delivered acupressure to their children. Two other studies used breathing techniques/guided imagery, another one used relaxation training
and the last one used inhalation aromatherapy.
Conclusions: The methodological quality of reviewed RCT’s studies was low and many failed to provide sufficient information in order to assess
their quality on many of the methodological indicators. Although, the review did not provide strong evidence in favor of CAM interventions,
the results were encouraging. The studies showed promising results and some positive trends such as the feasibility and acceptability of CAM
interventions in pediatric oncology/hematology unit.
Subjects

Parents

Child

Cancer

Anxiety

Complementary

Interventions

Psychological

Cognitive

Behavioral

Massage

Aromatherapy

Meditation

Music Therapy

Yoga

Guided Imagery

Relaxation

Acupuncture

Interventions

Cancer

Leukemia

Lymphoma

Brain Tumors

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