Nov 14 2008

Effects of massage for older adults

Published by Ross at 6:04 pm under Massage Therapy, research on massage

Patricia A. Sharpe, PhD, LMT

Prevention Research Center, Norman J. Arnold School of Public Health

University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29208

pasharpe@sc.edu

Objective.
The objective was to test the effects of massage therapy on physical function, stress perception, sleep, and general well-being among older adults compared to a guided relaxation control condition.

Design.
After screening for eligibility and contraindications, physical clearance for participation was obtained. Eligible participants were randomly assigned to massage or guided relaxation. Sessions were provided twice-weekly for four consecutive weeks. Functional assessments and interviews were conducted before the first session and after the last session.

Setting.
Participants came to the university for all sessions where a massage room had been reserved for the study.

Participants.
Forty-nine participants aged 60+ completed the study (25 massage and 24 guided relaxation). Three-fourths of participants were female; 88% white, 10% African American, and 2% Asian. Participants were independently living, relatively “well” older adults rather than a clinically defined group of patients.

Main Outcome Measures.
The main outcome measures were range of motion at shoulder, hip, and ankle by goniometer measurement; flexibility (chair sit-and-reach); tandem balance; agility (timed up and go test); general well-being (General Well-Being Scale, with subscales for anxiety, depression, positive well-being, self-control, vitality, and general health); Perceived Stress Scale; and Sleep (two items from the Philadelphia Sleep Quality Index).

Results.
The massage group improved significantly more than the guided relaxation group on anxiety, depression, vitality general health, positive well-being, timed up and go test, chair sit and reach test, shoulder abduction, and hip flexion.

Conclusion.
Massage therapy has positive effects on psychosocial and functional health of older adults.

Trackback URI | Comments RSS

Leave a Reply