There is no study found that examined the effects of hand massage and play activity on the loneliness, comfort and psychological well-being of the elderly in nursing homes. This study was planned as a pretest-posttest randomized controlled dual center study in order to examine the effects of hand massage and play activity on loneliness, comfort and psychological well-being in the elderly. 60 elderly people living in two nursing homes in Mersin city center will form the sample of the study. The sample will consist of three groups as hand massage group, game activity group and control group. The data were using the "Elderly Information Form", "Standardized Mini-Mental Test", "Loneliness Scale fort he Elderly", "General Comfort Scale", "Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-Being Scale", "Hand Massage" and "Play Activity (Jenga) will be collected. Hand massage group will be applied hand massage for 20 minutes for four weeks; the game activity group will play Jenga (game activity) for one hour a week. The control group will receive the institution's standart of care. Frequency, number, mean, Student's test and/or Mann-Whitney U test, ANOVA and/or Kruskal-Wallis test, Chi-square test and/or Correlation Analysis will be used in the analysis of the data. As a result of this research, the effects and benefits of hand massage and play activity on the loneliness, comfort and psychological well-being levels of the elderly living in nursing homes will be determined, and it is anticipated that these effects and benefits will be included in evidence-based guidlines.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
60
Hand massage is a simple comfort intervention that involves touch and conveys care that can easily be incorporated independently into routine nursing care activities. Hand massage is a western technique that includes five basic classical massage manipulations, including eufluorage, petrissage, friction, tapotman and vibration. Kolcaba et al. (2006) hand massage procedure will be applied with baby oil for 20 minutes, three times a week (12 times in total) for 4 weeks.
The number of people for the Jenga game was determined as two people in order to strengthen the social relationship among the elderly and to strengthen their psychomotor skills. Each game will be played with two people. For this reason, the elderly will be divided into five separate groups, two people each.These groups will be played the Jenga game for one hour a week on a certain day of the week, accompanied by the researcher, during the activity hours determined by the nursing home. After the game activity (Jenga) application is completed at the end of the fourth week, the post-test scales will be re-administered to the elderly by the researcher.
Nursing home
Mersin, Turkey (Türkiye)
RECRUITINGElderly Introduction Form
In this form, which was created by the researchers by scanning the literature; A total of 14 questions aimed at determining the introductory characteristics of the elderly (age, gender, marital status, education level, occupation, number of children, income level, place of residence, smoking and alcohol use, chronic disease diagnosis, duration, medications used, and length of stay in a nursing home) is located.
Time frame: First day
Standardized Mini Mental Test
The standardized version of the original Mini Mental Test developed by Folstein et al. (1975) by Molloy and Standish (1997) is an easy-to-apply test that provides information about the degree of cognitive impairment. This test consists of "orientation, recording, attention, calculation, reminder, language tests and configuration" sections. Test; It is a test that can be administered by physicians, nurses and psychologists in a short time (10 minutes), outpatient conditions or at the bedside. The test was developed for the purpose of short-term cognitive assessment in the elderly, especially in the examination of delirium or dementia.
Time frame: will be applied on the first day. If the Standardized Mini Mental Test result is not 25 points or more, the patient will be excluded.
Loneliness Scale for the Elderly
It is a measurement tool developed based on the cognitive behavioral approach. The scale, which has 11 items in total, consists of two sub-dimensions, "Emotional Loneliness" and "Social Loneliness":
Time frame: First week
Loneliness Scale for the Elderly
It is a measurement tool developed based on the cognitive behavioral approach. The scale, which has 11 items in total, consists of two sub-dimensions, "Emotional Loneliness" and "Social Loneliness":
Time frame: Forth week
General Comfort Scale
The levels of the scale, which was formed by taking the taxonomic structure, which includes three levels and four dimensions that constitute the theoretical components of comfort, as a guide; relief (16 items), relief (17 items) and overcoming problems (15 items). Scale dimensions are; physical dimension (12 items), psychospiritual dimension (13 items), environmental dimension (13 items) and sociocultural dimension (10 items).
Time frame: First week
General Comfort Scale
The levels of the scale, which was formed by taking the taxonomic structure, which includes three levels and four dimensions that constitute the theoretical components of comfort, as a guide; relief (16 items), relief (17 items) and overcoming problems (15 items). Scale dimensions are; physical dimension (12 items), psychospiritual dimension (13 items), environmental dimension (13 items) and sociocultural dimension (10 items).
Time frame: Forth week
Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-Being Scale
Scale, Tennant et al. (2007) in order to determine the mental well-being levels of the people of England. The scale is a one-dimensional, 14-item, 5-point Likert scale. Participants respond as "1 = I do not agree at all, 2 = I do not agree, 3 = I agree somewhat, 4 = I agree, 5 = I completely agree).
Time frame: First week
Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-Being Scale
Scale, Tennant et al. (2007) in order to determine the mental well-being levels of the people of England. The scale is a one-dimensional, 14-item, 5-point Likert scale. Participants respond as "1 = I do not agree at all, 2 = I do not agree, 3 = I agree somewhat, 4 = I agree, 5 = I completely agree).
Time frame: Forth week
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