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Acupressure helps calm dementia patients

Acupressure might have a calming effect on the aggressive behaviour that often results from dementia.

Acupressure helps calm dementia patients

Acupressure might have a calming effect on the aggressive behaviour that often results from dementia. One of the most common symptoms of Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia is agitation. It's expressed in any number of ways; some people with dementia yell at or physically attack other people, while others habitually undress themselves or wander. Agitation not only puts dementia patients at risk of injury, but also makes their overall care even more challenging. Long used in traditional Chinese medicine, acupressure is based on the same principles as acupuncture, but employs touch rather than needles. According to traditional theory, stimulating particular points on the skin helps balance the flow of energy, or "chi," throughout the body. With acupressure, practitioners use their fingers to stimulate these pressure points, making it a form of massage. Researchers from the National Yang-Ming University in Taipei, Taiwan analysed whether acupressure could offer a relatively simple way to address the problem. The researchers tested the technique among 31 dementia patients at one nursing home. For four weeks, each patient received a 15-minute acupressure treatment twice a day, five days a week. As a comparison therapy, the researchers spent another four weeks visiting the patients each day for a 15-minute counseling session. Twenty of the 31 patients were able to complete the study. It was found that acupressure eased patients' agitation far better than the counseling approach. What's more, the therapy seemed to calm patients' behaviour immediately and reduce their episodes of aggression over the four-week treatment period. The findings suggest that acupressure could be used to ease patients' symptoms and also to prevent symptoms from occurring in the first place. A recent research review found evidence that various forms of touch therapy, such as gentle massage, can calm dementia patients' anxiety and agitation. The authors speculated that it's the simple act of human contact that might explain the benefit; for people whose ability to communicate has been taken away by dementia, physical touch may be the easiest or only way for them to connect with other people.
Journal of Clinical Nursing,
February 2007
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