An Idea Health Journal
Vol 6 No 01 (2026)

Music Therapy for Reducing Pain Intensity in Post-Laparotomy Patients: A Quasi-Experimental Study in Indonesia

St. Nurfatul Jannah (Famika University)
Wiwiek Hidayati Jaya (Famika University)
Anester B Lololuan (Famika University)



Article Info

Publish Date
17 Mar 2026

Abstract

Postoperative pain following laparotomy remains a significant challenge, with 58-60% of patients experiencing moderate to severe pain despite standard pharmacological management. Music therapy has emerged as a promising non-pharmacological intervention. This study aimed to examine the effectiveness of music therapy in reducing pain intensity among patients following laparotomy surgery. A quasi-experimental one-group pretest-posttest design was conducted at RSUD Daya Kota Makassar, Indonesia, from April 1 to April 30, 2025. A total of 34 post-laparotomy patients were recruited using total sampling. Inclusion criteria were adults aged ≥18 years on postoperative day 1, literate, able to communicate in Indonesian, and willing to participate. Exclusion criteria included severe pain (NRS 7-10), recent analgesic use (<2 hours), or continuous analgesic administration. Participants received classical music therapy via headphones for 10-20 minutes daily over three consecutive days. Pain intensity was measured using the Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) before and after the intervention. The mean pain intensity decreased significantly from 4.76 ± 1.18 at baseline to 2.29 ± 0.87 post-intervention (Z = -5.188, p .000), representing a mean reduction of 2.47 points. The distribution of pain categories shifted substantially, with mild pain increasing from 20.6% to 88.2%, while moderate pain decreased from 79.4% to 11.8% following the intervention. The significant reduction in pain scores supports the integration of music therapy as a safe, accessible, and cost-effective complementary approach to standard postoperative pain management protocols in clinical practice.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

IHJ

Publisher

Subject

Dentistry Health Professions Medicine & Pharmacology Nursing Public Health

Description

a publication of scientific work in the field of health in a broad sense such as public health, nursing, midwifery, medicine, pharmacy, health psychology, nutrition, health technology, health analysis, health information systems, medical records, hospital management and so ...