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Home-based acupressure for managing constipation and subjective well-being in spinal cord injury survivors: A randomized controlled trial

Meng-qi Li a, Yan Li a, Winsome Lam a, Wing Fai Yeung a, Yuen Shan Ho a, Jia-ying Li a, Tsz Ching Sun a, Sam Yuen b, Yu-le Hu a, Jannelle Yorke a   

  1. a School of Nursing, the Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong SAR 999077, China
    b School of Chinese Medicine, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong SAR 999077, China
  • Received:2024-07-11 Accepted:2025-01-10 Published:2025-08-07
  • Contact: Yan Li, PhD; E-mail address: yan-nursing.li@polyu.edu.hk

Background
Spinal cord injury (SCI) survivors often experience constipation, which contributes to a reduced sense of well-being and a lower quality of life. Acupressure offers a non-pharmacological and non-invasive alternative therapy for treating constipation.

Objective
This study examined the effects of home-based acupressure on constipation and subjective well-being among SCI survivors.

Design, setting, participants and interventions
This randomized controlled trial randomly assigned 80 adults from Hong Kong with SCI to two study groups. Using a video demonstration filmed by a registered traditional Chinese medicine practitioner, the intervention group performed home-based acupressure (self-administered or caregiver-assisted) twice daily, 15 min/session, for 10 consecutive days. The control group performed manual light touching of the abdomen with the same frequency and duration as the intervention group. Both groups received defecation education through a structured booklet.

Main outcomes measures
The primary outcome was constipation severity. Secondary outcomes included bowel habits, psychological well-being, and quality of life. Focus group interviews were conducted after the intervention to collect subjective feedback from participants.

Results
Significant group-by-time interaction effects on constipation severity (P = 0.005) and quality of life (P = 0.001) revealed that home-based acupressure produced better results than the control. These treatment effects persisted at the one-month follow-up and continued to have a large effect size (Cohen’s d > 0.8). Compared to the control group, the acupressure group also had improvements in anxiety (Cohen’s d = 0.69) and depression (Cohen’s d = 0.72) at the end of the intervention period. Three qualitative categories were identified from the focus group interviews: improvements in bowel function and management; reduced psychological distress following relief from constipation; and acceptability of home-based acupressure.

Conclusions
Acupressure effectively relieves constipation, enhances psychological well-being, and improves quality of life in people with SCI. These data provide novel evidence supporting the use of home-based acupressure as an acceptable and effective therapy for treating constipation after SCI.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05558657).

Key words: Spinal cord injury, Acupressure, Constipation, Subjective well-being, Psychological health, Quality of life

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