认知疗法、正念减压和行为疗法治疗慢性腰痛患者:一项比较机制研究。

IF 4.5 1区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
John W Burns, Mark P Jensen, James Gerhart, Beverly E Thorn, Teresa A Lillis, James Carmody, Francis Keefe
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引用次数: 3

摘要

目的:认知疗法(CT)、正念减压疗法(MBSR)和行为疗法(BT)对慢性疼痛的治疗效果有所改善。证据还表明,假定的治疗机制的改变与结果的改变有关。然而,方法学上的局限性阻碍了对心理社会慢性疼痛治疗如何起作用的清晰理解。在这项比较机制研究中,我们检查了三种治疗之间特定和共享机制效应的证据。方法:对521例慢性腰痛患者进行CT、MBSR、BT和常规治疗(TAU)的比较。八个单独的疗程每周对“特定”机制(疼痛灾难化、正念、行为激活)和结果进行评估。结果:CT、MBSR和BT对所有机制变量的治疗前后效果相似,三种积极治疗均比TAU有更大的改善。参与者对不同治疗的预期收益和工作联盟的评分是相似的。滞后和交叉滞后分析显示,前一周机制和结果因素的变化预测了下周相应因素的变化。对方差贡献的分析表明,疼痛灾难化和疼痛自我效能的变化是后续结果变化的一致和独特的预测因子。结论:研究结果支持共享机制优于特定机制。考虑到显著的滞后效应和交叉滞后效应,单向概念化-结果机制-需要扩展到包括互惠效应。因此,上周疼痛相关认知的变化可以预测下周疼痛干扰的变化,而疼痛干扰又可以预测下周疼痛相关认知的变化,这可能是一个向上的改善螺旋。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c) 2023 APA,版权所有)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Cognitive therapy, mindfulness-based stress reduction, and behavior therapy for people with chronic low back pain: A comparative mechanisms study.

Objective: Cognitive therapy (CT), mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR), and behavior therapy (BT) for chronic pain treatment produce outcome improvements. Evidence also suggests that changes in putative therapeutic mechanisms are associated with changes in outcomes. Nonetheless, methodological limitations preclude clear understanding of how psychosocial chronic pain treatments work. In this comparative mechanism study, we examined evidence for specific and shared mechanism effects across the three treatments.

Method: CT, MBSR, BT, and treatment as usual (TAU) were compared in people with chronic low back pain (N = 521). Eight individual sessions were administered with weekly assessments of "specific" mechanisms (pain catastrophizing, mindfulness, behavior activation) and outcomes.

Results: CT, MBSR, and BT produced similar pre- to posttreatment effects on all mechanism variables, and all three active treatments produced greater improvements than TAU. Participant ratings of expectations of benefit and working alliance were similar across treatments. Lagged and cross-lagged analyses revealed that prior week changes in both mechanism and outcome factors predicted next week changes in their counterparts. Analyses of variance contributions suggested that changes in pain catastrophizing and pain self-efficacy were consistent unique predictors of subsequent outcome changes.

Conclusions: Findings support the operation of shared mechanisms over specific ones. Given significant lagged and cross-lagged effects, unidirectional conceptualizations-mechanism to outcome-need to be expanded to include reciprocal effects. Thus, prior week changes in pain-related cognitions could predict next week changes in pain interference which in turn could predict next week changes in pain-related cognitions, in what may be an upward spiral of improvement. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

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来源期刊
CiteScore
9.00
自引率
3.40%
发文量
94
期刊介绍: The Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology® (JCCP) publishes original contributions on the following topics: the development, validity, and use of techniques of diagnosis and treatment of disordered behaviorstudies of a variety of populations that have clinical interest, including but not limited to medical patients, ethnic minorities, persons with serious mental illness, and community samplesstudies that have a cross-cultural or demographic focus and are of interest for treating behavior disordersstudies of personality and of its assessment and development where these have a clear bearing on problems of clinical dysfunction and treatmentstudies of gender, ethnicity, or sexual orientation that have a clear bearing on diagnosis, assessment, and treatmentstudies of psychosocial aspects of health behaviors. Studies that focus on populations that fall anywhere within the lifespan are considered. JCCP welcomes submissions on treatment and prevention in all areas of clinical and clinical–health psychology and especially on topics that appeal to a broad clinical–scientist and practitioner audience. JCCP encourages the submission of theory–based interventions, studies that investigate mechanisms of change, and studies of the effectiveness of treatments in real-world settings. JCCP recommends that authors of clinical trials pre-register their studies with an appropriate clinical trial registry (e.g., ClinicalTrials.gov, ClinicalTrialsRegister.eu) though both registered and unregistered trials will continue to be considered at this time.
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