Pain Management Nursing
Volume 9, Issue 3 , Pages 96-103, September 2008

Korean and American Music Reduces Pain in Korean Women After Gynecologic Surgery

  • Marion Good, PhD, RN, FAAN
  • ,
  • Sukhee Ahn, PhD, RN

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationAddress correspondence to Sukhee Ahn, School of Nursing, Chungnam National University, 6 Munhwa 1-Dong, Jung-gu, Daejeon, 301-747 Korea

Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing, Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, Ohio; and the Chungnam National University School of Nursing, Korea

Abstract 

American music has been found to relieve pain in adults in several countries but has not been tested in Korea. Korean women have reported that they would like American music as well as Korean folk songs and religious music sung in Korean. The study purpose was to pilot-test the effects of music on pain after gynecologic surgery in Korean women and to compare pain relief between those who chose American or Korean music. Using a quasiexperimental pretest-posttest design, 73 South Korean women on a preoperative unit were assigned by day of the week to receive music (n = 34; 47%) or no music (n = 39; 53%). The music group chose among Korean (ballads and religious and popular songs) and American (soft slow piano and orchestra) music and heard it for 15 minutes at four time points (postoperatively), whereas the controls rested in bed. They marked VAS Sensation and Distress of Pain scales before and after each test. The two groups were similar on pretest pain. When controlling for pretest pain, MANCOVA indicated that there was significantly less posttest pain in those with music plus analgesics than those with analgesics alone at three of the four tests: p = .04 to .001. Two-thirds in the music group (n = 21; 62%) chose Korean music and one-third (n = 13; 38%) chose American, with no difference in pain: both were effective. In addition to analgesics, music can be used to reduce postoperative pain in Korean women. Patients selected music that was appealing to them. Nurses in many countries can consider music of the country and seek individual preferences to use in addition to analgesics for postoperative pain.

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PII: S1524-9042(08)00044-1

doi:10.1016/j.pmn.2008.02.002

Refers to erratum:

Pain Management Nursing
Volume 9, Issue 3 , Pages 96-103, September 2008