The Effect of the Combination Stimulation Cutaneous and Virgin Coconut Oil on the Sleep Quality and Comfort level in People Undergoing Hemodialysis
Dublin Core
Title
The Effect of the Combination Stimulation Cutaneous and Virgin Coconut Oil on the Sleep Quality and Comfort level in People Undergoing Hemodialysis
Subject
stimulation
cutaneous, sleep,
renal dialysis,
chronic renal failure
cutaneous, sleep,
renal dialysis,
chronic renal failure
Description
Introduction: Sleep quality can be disruptive in patients with chronic
illness, especially in patients with Chronic Renal Failure (CRF). In recent
times, CRF was associated with poor sleep quality, about 25-36% of the
normal adult population had sleep disorders. However, the prevalence of
sleep disturbance in patients with uremia undergoing of hemodialysis
occurs about 40-85% higher than the general population. It was reported
that the majority of cases of chronic renal failure are people who lack sleep.
Sleep disorders are very common in patients with chronic kidney disease.
Poor sleep in hemodialysis patients has a negative impact on the physical
and mental components of a person's life and leads to a decrease in their
performance as well as cognitive and memory dysfunction.
Methods: A queasy-experiment with pretest-posttest control group design.
The sampling method is used simple random sampling, conducted
between January-February 2018. A total of 52 patients undergoing
hemodialysis divided randomly into two groups. The treatment group was
given cutaneous stimulation and VCO for 4 weeks and the control group
was not given cutaneous stimulation and VCO.
Results: Giving cutaneous stimulation and VCO effective in improving sleep
quality and comfort level. There were significant results on sleep quality
seen from Mann Whitney test with p <.001 and comfort level from Mann
Whitney test with p = 0.009.
Conclusion: Provision of cutaneous stimulation and VCO can be used as
complementary therapy in improving quality of sleep and comfort in
patients undergoing hemodialysis.
illness, especially in patients with Chronic Renal Failure (CRF). In recent
times, CRF was associated with poor sleep quality, about 25-36% of the
normal adult population had sleep disorders. However, the prevalence of
sleep disturbance in patients with uremia undergoing of hemodialysis
occurs about 40-85% higher than the general population. It was reported
that the majority of cases of chronic renal failure are people who lack sleep.
Sleep disorders are very common in patients with chronic kidney disease.
Poor sleep in hemodialysis patients has a negative impact on the physical
and mental components of a person's life and leads to a decrease in their
performance as well as cognitive and memory dysfunction.
Methods: A queasy-experiment with pretest-posttest control group design.
The sampling method is used simple random sampling, conducted
between January-February 2018. A total of 52 patients undergoing
hemodialysis divided randomly into two groups. The treatment group was
given cutaneous stimulation and VCO for 4 weeks and the control group
was not given cutaneous stimulation and VCO.
Results: Giving cutaneous stimulation and VCO effective in improving sleep
quality and comfort level. There were significant results on sleep quality
seen from Mann Whitney test with p <.001 and comfort level from Mann
Whitney test with p = 0.009.
Conclusion: Provision of cutaneous stimulation and VCO can be used as
complementary therapy in improving quality of sleep and comfort in
patients undergoing hemodialysis.
Creator
Putu Intan Daryaswanti1*
, Elyana Asnar2, Ilya Krisnana2
, Elyana Asnar2, Ilya Krisnana2
Source
https://doi.org/10.37363/bnr.2022.32103
Date
25 July 2022
Contributor
peri irawan
Format
pdf
Language
english
Type
text
Files
Collection
Citation
Putu Intan Daryaswanti1*
, Elyana Asnar2, Ilya Krisnana2, “The Effect of the Combination Stimulation Cutaneous and Virgin Coconut Oil on the Sleep Quality and Comfort level in People Undergoing Hemodialysis,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed April 11, 2026, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/11428.