Internet-based and mobile-based cognitive behavioral therapy for chronic diseases: a systematic review and meta-analysis

被引:0
作者
Tiffany Junchen Tao
Teck Kuan Lim
Ernest Tsun Fung Yeung
Huinan Liu
Phoenix Bibha Shris
Lawrence Ka Yin Ma
Tatia Mei Chun Lee
Wai Kai Hou
机构
[1] The Education University of Hong Kong,Centre for Psychosocial Health
[2] The Education University of Hong Kong,Department of Special Education and Counselling
[3] The Education University of Hong Kong,Department of Psychology
[4] The University of Hong Kong,State Key Laboratory of Brain and Cognitive Sciences
[5] The University of Hong Kong,Laboratory of Neuropsychology & Human Neuroscience
来源
npj Digital Medicine | / 6卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Positive adjustment to chronic diseases reduces psychiatric comorbidity and enhances quality of life. Very little is known about the benefit of internet-based and mobile-based Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (IM-CBT) on physical outcomes and its reciprocal interactions with psychiatric outcomes, the active therapeutic elements, and effect moderators among people with major chronic medical conditions. In this systematic review and meta-analysis (PROSPERO: CRD42022265738), CINAHL of Systematic Reviews, MEDLINE, PsycINFO, PubMed, Web of Science are systematically searched up to 1 June 2022, for randomized controlled trials (RCTs) comparing IM-CBT against non-CBT control condition(s) among people with chronic disease(s). Primary outcomes include improvements in psychiatric symptoms (depressive, anxiety, PTSD symptoms, general psychological distress) from baseline to post-intervention and follow-ups. Secondary outcomes include improvements in physical distress (physical symptoms, functional impairment, self-rated ill health, objective physiological dysfunction). Among 44 RCTs (5077 patients with seven different chronic diseases), IM-CBT improves depressive symptoms, anxiety symptoms, and general psychological distress at post-intervention and across follow-ups, and improves physical distress and functional impairment at post-intervention. Preliminary evidence suggests that behavioral modification and problem-solving could be necessary components to reduce psychiatric symptoms in IM-CBT, whereas cognitive restructuring, psychoeducation, and mindfulness elements relate to reduced physical distress. IM-CBT shows stronger benefits in chronic pain, cancer, arthritis, and cardiovascular disease, relative to other conditions. Changes in psychiatric symptoms and physical distress prospectively predict each other over time. IM-CBT is an effective intervention for comprehensive symptom management among people with chronic diseases.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 196 条
[1]  
Hajat C(2016)2015 DALYs & HALE Collaborators. Global, regional, and national disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) for 315 diseases and injuries and healthy life expectancy (HALE), 1990–2015: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2015 Lancet 388 1603-1658
[2]  
Stein E(2018)The global burden of multiple chronic conditions: a narrative review Prev. Med. Rep. 12 284-293
[3]  
Ngo VK(2013)Grand challenges: integrating mental health care into the non-communicable disease agenda PLoS Med. 10 e1001443-1042
[4]  
O’Neil A(2015)A shared framework for the common mental disorders and non-communicable disease: key considerations for disease prevention and control BMC Psychiatry 15 l295-11
[5]  
Stein DJ(2019)Integrating mental health with other non-communicable diseases BMJ 364 1032-481
[6]  
Daré LO(2019)Co-morbidities of mental disorders and chronic physical diseases in developing and emerging countries: a meta-analysis BMC Public Health 19 4-665
[7]  
Armbrecht E(2020)Economic and humanistic burden associated with noncommunicable diseases among adults with depression and anxiety in the United States J. Med. Econ. 23 463-371
[8]  
Andersson G(2014)Advantages and limitations of internet‐based interventions for common mental disorders World Psychiatry 13 659-295
[9]  
Titov N(2021)Improving access to care: telemedicine across medical domains Annu. Rev. Public Health 42 361-8
[10]  
Barbosa W(2018)Internet-based interventions in chronic somatic disease Dtsch. Ärztebl 115 15-187