基于同伴传递的认知行为治疗的干预减少了社区居住成人糖尿病和慢性疼痛患者的抑郁和压力:一项集群随机试验。

Susan J Andreae, Lynn J Andreae, Joshua S Richman, Andrea L Cherrington, Monika M Safford
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引用次数: 6

摘要

背景:寻找有效的,可获得的治疗方案,如专业提供的认知行为疗法(CBT)对医疗复杂的个体在农村社区是具有挑战性的。目的:我们研究了一项以cbt为基础的项目,旨在增加糖尿病患者在慢性疼痛情况下的身体活动,该项目由社区成员作为同伴教练进行培训,该项目是否也能改善抑郁症状和感知压力。方法:在一组随机对照试验中,参与者接受了3个月的电话生活方式改变计划,并结合CBT元素。同伴教练帮助参与者发展与适应性应对、糖尿病自我管理、目标设定、压力减轻和认知重组相关的技能。注意控制组在接触次数相同的情况下接受一般健康建议,但没有CBT成分。使用流行病学研究中心抑郁和感知压力量表评估抑郁症状和压力。评估分别在基线、3个月和1年进行。结果:在177名随访数据的参与者中,96%是非洲裔美国人,79%是女性,74%报告年收入。结论:这个基于同伴传递的cbt项目改善了糖尿病和慢性疼痛患者的抑郁症状和压力。培训社区成员可能是在农村和资源不足社区提供基于cbt的干预措施的可行策略。临床试验注册:NCT02538055。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Peer-delivered Cognitive Behavioral Therapy-based Intervention Reduced Depression and Stress in Community Dwelling Adults With Diabetes and Chronic Pain: A Cluster Randomized Trial.

Background: Finding effective, accessible treatment options such as professional-delivered cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for medically complex individuals is challenging in rural communities.

Purpose: We examined whether a CBT-based program intended to increase physical activity despite chronic pain in patients with diabetes delivered by community members trained as peer coaches also improved depressive symptoms and perceived stress.

Methods: Participants in a cluster-randomized controlled trial received a 3-month telephonic lifestyle modification program with integrated CBT elements. Peer coaches assisted participants in developing skills related to adaptive coping, diabetes self-management goal-setting, stress reduction, and cognitive restructuring. Attention controls received general health advice with an equal number of contacts but no CBT elements. Depressive symptoms and stress were assessed using the Centers for Epidemiologic Studies Depression and Perceived Stress scales. Assessments occurred at baseline, 3 months, and 1 year.

Results: Of 177 participants with follow-up data, 96% were African Americans, 79% women, and 74% reported annual income <$20,000. There was a significant reduction in perceived stress in intervention compared to control participants at 3-months (β = -2.79, p = .002 [95% CI -4.52, -1.07]) and 1 year (β = -2.59, p < .0001 [95% CI -3.30, -1.87]). Similarly, intervention participants reported significant decreases in depressive symptoms at 3-months (β = -2.48, p < .0001 [95% CI -2.48, -2.02]) and at 1 year (β = -1.62, p < .0001 [95% CI -2.37, -0.86]).

Conclusions: This peer-delivered CBT-based program improved depressive symptoms and stress in individuals with diabetes and chronic pain. Training community members may be a feasible strategy for offering CBT-based interventions in rural and under-resourced communities.

Clinical trial registration: NCT02538055.

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