Multiple sclerosis (MS); It is an autoimmune central nervous system (CNS) disease characterized by inflammation, demyelination and axon damage, progressing with attacks and remissions. It ranks first among the diseases that cause neurological disability in adults, regardless of trauma. Being diagnosed with MS usually creates a state of shock in patients and it takes time to get used to the disease. Individuals with MS have to struggle daily with various physical, cognitive and psychological symptoms such as walking and movement limitations, pain, fatigue, depression, memory and concentration difficulties. This type of chronic disease, which occurs in adulthood (between the ages of 20-40), increases the size of the problems because it is seen in a period when life is most active and functional, and family, social and professional goals and activities are at the highest level. Individuals with MS may be prone to depression and anxiety due to various psychosocial risk factors such as inadequate coping or inadequate social support, as well as biological processes associated with MS (such as changes in brain structure or immunological and inflammatory pathways). Psychiatric symptoms may occur before the diagnosis, when the first neurological symptoms appear, or after diagnosis as indicated in retrospective studies.
Because depression and anxiety can worsen over time in individuals with MS, it is important to improve early recognition and management of these symptoms. Individuals with MS experience intense anxiety and stress in the process from the first symptoms to the diagnosis process. Depression affects 15 to 47% of individuals with MS, and this rate is much higher than other chronic neurological diseases and is three times higher than in the general population. Anxiety disorders are present in 36-54% of the MS population, and approximately 30% of individuals with MS have symptoms consistent with generalized anxiety disorder. It is important to create short and cost-effective interventions to reduce depressive symptoms, psychological distress, and improve the quality of life of individuals with MS. Emotional Freedom Technique (EFT) is a psychophysiological intervention that combines elements of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), exposure therapy, and somatic stimulation using acupuncture points. EFT is an intervention in which one's physical or psychological awareness focuses on a specific issue and simultaneously stimulates selected acupuncture points along the body meridians, especially on the head and upper body, by touching them with the fingertips. Since it is a simple applicable, evidence-based self-help technique like EFT, it is a suitable first-line option for treating psychiatric symptoms. As a safe and reliable self-help method, EFT is highly effective in reducing symptoms of depression in a wide range of settings and demographic groups and shows clinical benefit as a low-cost drug-free treatment. It is also suggested that EFT improves symptoms occurring in more than one physiological system simultaneously.
Determining and intervening the depression or anxiety levels of individuals with MS is especially important in the treatment of newly diagnosed individuals. For these symptoms, EFT is a short, easy, reliable, cost-effective and self-administered method, while being a self-administered method allows the individual to manage the disease. The aim of this study is to examine the effect of EFT on depressive symptoms, anxiety, psychological distress levels, SDMT scores, resting heart rate and blood pressure in individuals with newly diagnosed multiple sclerosis.
The study will consist of volunteers over the age of 18 who have been diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in the last three months, one month has passed since the treatment was started, followed in the Neurology Outpatient Clinic of Dokuz Eylul University Medical Faculty Hospital or treated in the MS Day Treatment Unit. 50 participants, including 2 groups (with EFT and no EFT), will be included in the study. EDSS will be applied to individuals by a specialist physician. They will be referred to the MS day treatment unit. Since it is a randomized controlled experimental study, the sample and follow-up measurements will be carried out by a psychologist in the unit where the research is conducted, who does not carry out the EFT application. Scales will be applied in the daily unit. The study will be randomized and divided into two groups at the beginning. The psychologist who made the sampling selection will not know which group the participants will belong to, and the EFT practitioner will not know the anxiety, depression and psychological distress levels of the individuals participating in the study.