Music boosts recovery from surgery,
reduces pain
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[August 13, 2015]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - Listening to music
before, during and after surgery reduces patients' pain, eases anxiety
and lessens the need for painkillers, British scientists said on
Thursday.
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After reviewing evidence from around 7,000 patients, the
scientists said people going for surgery should be allowed to choose
the music they'd like to hear to maximize the benefit.
But they also warned that the music should not interfere with the
medical team's communication during an operation.
"Music is a non-invasive, safe, cheap intervention that should be
available to everyone undergoing surgery," said Catherine Meads from
Brunel University, who co-led the research.
The team conducted a meta-analysis of all published randomized
trials looking at how music compares with standard care or other
non-drug interventions such as massage and relaxation in effecting
recovery of adults after operations.
The results, published in The Lancet journal, found patients were
significantly less anxious after surgery and reported more
satisfaction after listening to music. They also needed less pain
medication and reported less pain compared with controls.
While the study found listening to music at any time seemed
effective, there was a trend for better outcomes if patients
listened to music before surgery rather than during or after.
And when patients selected their own music, there was a slightly
greater reduction in pain and in use of pain relief.
"We have known since the time of Florence Nightingale that listening
to music has a positive impact on patients during surgery, by making
them feel calmer and reducing pain," said Martin Hirsch of Queen
Mary University of London, who co-led the work. "However, it's taken
pulling together all the small studies ... into one robust
meta-analysis to really prove it works."
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Paul Glasziou of Australia's Bond University said the results held a
clear message: "Music is a simple and cheap intervention," he wrote
in a comment in The Lancet. "A drug with similar effects might
generate substantial marketing."
The team now plans to follow up with a pilot scheme introducing
music at The Royal London Hospital for women having Caesarean
sections and women having hysteroscopy.
Patients will submit their playlist on a device of their choice to
be connected to a pillow with inbuilt loudspeakers, and the
researchers will then analyze the effectiveness of rolling this out
in practice.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)
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