Journal of Traditional Chinese Medicine ›› 2020, Vol. 40 ›› Issue (1): 128-136.DOI: 10.19852/j.cnki.jtcm.2020.01.014

Previous Articles     Next Articles

Effect of acupressure on postpartum low back pain, salivary cortisol, physical limitations, and depression: a randomized controlled pilot study

Cheng Hsuesh-Yu, Carol Shieh, Wu Bei-Yu, Cheng Yu-Fen   

  1. Department of Nursing, Kaohsiung Chang Gung Memorial Hospital;Department of Community and Health Systems, Indiana University School of Nursing;Department of Chinese Medicine, Kaohsiung Chang Gung Memorial Hospital;
  • Online:2020-02-15 Published:2020-02-15
  • Supported by:
    Supported by the Chang Gung Memorial Hospital:the Effects of Acupressure on Postpartum Low Back Pain(No.CMRPG8G0941)

Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To investigate the effect of acupressure on postpartum low back pain(LBP), salivary cortisol, physical limitations, and postpartum depression.METHODS: Participants were 70 postpartum women who were randomly assigned to either an intervention(n = 35) or a control(n = 35) group. The intervention group received 10 acupressure sessions(1 session per day, 5 d per week). The control group received 10 sham acupressure sessions. Outcomes were assessed using a visual analogue scale(LBP intensity), salivary cortisol values(LBP biomarker),and Chinese versions of the Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire(daily activity limitations), Oswes-try Disability Index(physical activity limitations),and the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale(postpartum depression).RESULTS: Participants in the intervention group had significantly lower levels of LBP intensity, daily activity limitations, physical activity limitations, and postpartum depression than those in the control group. There was no significant between-group difference in salivary cortisol.CONCLUSION: Acupressure may reduce postpartum LBP intensity and limitations in daily and physical activity, and alleviate postpartum depressive symptoms. Acupressure should be offered in postpartum care settings as an alternative treatment for postpartum women with LBP.

Key words: Acupressure, Low back pain, Postpartum period, Depression, Randomized controlled trial, Pilot projects

Cite this article

Cheng Hsuesh-Yu, Carol Shieh, Wu Bei-Yu, Cheng Yu-Fen. Effect of acupressure on postpartum low back pain, salivary cortisol, physical limitations, and depression: a randomized controlled pilot study[J]. Journal of Traditional Chinese Medicine, 2020, 40(1): 128-136.