Summary of Systematic Reviews of Mind-Body Therapies (MBTs).
First Author, Year | Condition | Number and Type of Studies Reviewed | Total Number of Subjects | Interventions | Results | Quality Rating13 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Anderson & Lyttkens35 | Tinnitus | 8 randomized controlled trials | 700 | Cognitive-behavioral, relaxation, hypnosis, biofeedback, education, problem solving | Effect sizes:* Annoyance = 0.86 Loudness = 0.68 Negative affect = 0.48 Sleep = 0.26 Effects diminished at follow-up | 4 |
Astin et al36 | Rheumatoid arthritis | 24 randomized controlled trials | 1,189 | Psychological-psychosocial approaches | Effect sizes: Pain = 0.22 (0.06 at follow-up) Disability = 0.36 (0.20 at follow-up) | 5 |
Berghmans et al37 | Urinary incontinence | 11 randomized controlled trials | 240 | Pelvic floor muscle exercises with or without biofeedback | No evidence that addition of biofeedback is helpful | 4 |
Brown38 | Diabetes | 82 trials (26 single group design) | Not provided | Patient education including relaxation, stress reduction, and cognitive-behavioral counseling | Metabolic control (0.16–0.41) | 5 |
Carroll & Seers39 | Chronic pain | 9 randomized trials | 414 | Relaxation | Insufficient evidence to support use of relaxation | 4 |
Devine & Pearcy40 | Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease | 65 studies (54% controlled; 34% randomized) | 3,642 | Psychoeducational care (see Table 1) | Endurance = 0.77 Functional status = 0.63 | 7 |
Devine41 | Asthma | 31 studies (58% randomized) | 1,860 | Psychoeducational care | Asthma attacks = 0.56 Respiratory volume = 0.34 Expiratory flow rate = 0.29 Functional status = 0.46 Medication use = 0.62 | 5 |
Devine42 | Presurgery | 191 studies (69% randomized) | Not available | Presurgical psychoeducational interventions | Recovery = 0.43 Pain = 0.38 | 7 |
Dusseldorp43 | Coronary heart disease | 37 studies (75% randomized) | 9,699 | Health education and stress management | 34% reduction in cardiac mortality 29% reduction in recurrent events | 5 |
Eisenberg et al44 | Hypertension | 26 randomized trials | 1,264 | Cognitive behavioral techniques (including meditation, relaxation, biofeedback, stress management) | Significant blood pressure declines compared with usual care or wait-list control, but not significant compared with placebo or sham condition | 5 |
Glanz et al45 | Post stroke rehabilitation | 8 randomized trials | 180 | Biofeedback | Lower extremity range of motion = 0.5 Upper extremity = 2.3 | 7 |
Haddock et al46 | Chronic benign headache | 20 randomized trials | Not available | Home and clinic-based behavioral treatments | 46% (home based) and 53% (clinic based) showed significant improvement (ie, 50% reduction in headache activity) | 5 |
Hadhazy et al47 | Fibromyalgia | 13 randomized trials | 802 | Mind-body therapies including autogenic training, relaxation, meditation, biofeedback, cognitive therapy, hypnosis | Limited evidence that MBTs are effective in fibromyalgia | 5 |
Hermann et al48 | Pediatric migraine | 17 studies (9 control group design) | 92 | Behavioral treatments (typically biofeedback or relaxation, or multi-component MBT) | All behavioral treatments more effective than placebo or wait-list although thermal biofeedback alone or in combination with relaxation appeared most effective | 4 |
Holyrod & Penzien49 | Migraine | 35 studies (63% used between-group comparisons) | 2,445 | Biofeedback and/or relaxation | Relaxation and biofeedback appear equally effective compared with pharmacologic approaches (43% reduction in migraine activity) | 3 |
Johnston & Vogele50 | Surgery | 34 randomized trials | 1,774 | Psychological preparation | Pain = 0.85 Pain medication = 0.60 Length of stay = 0.65 Recovery = 0.61 | 2 |
Linden & Chambers51 | Hypertension | 89 randomized trials | 1,651 | Psychologically based nonpharmacologic treatments | Individualized therapy appears most effective, ES = 0.65 for systolic blood pressure Multicomponent ES = 0.51 Single method ES = 0.47 | 2 |
Linden et al52 | Coronary artery disease | 23 randomized trials | 2,024 | Addition of psychosocial treatment to standard cardiac rehabilitation | Patients not receiving psychosocial adjunct had adjusted odds ratio for 2-y mortality of 1.7 and 1.84 for recurrence—effects weakened at follow-up | 3 |
Meyer & Mark53 | Cancer | 45 randomized trials | 2,840 | Psychosocial interventions (eg, cognitive behavioral, social support, educational, and multimodal interventions) | Effect sizes: Functional adjustment = 0.19 Treatment and disease-related symptoms = 0.26 | 3 |
Moreland et al54 | Stroke | 8 randomized trials | Not available | Biofeedback | Significant changes in ankle muscle strength, ES = 1.2 | 7 |
Morin et al55 | Insomnia | 59 controlled trials | 2,102 | Psychological interventions (eg, stimulus control, relaxation) | Significant changes in sleep latency, ES = 0.88 Time awake after sleep, ES = 0.65 | 3 |
Morley et al56 | Chronic pain | 25 randomized trials | 1,672 | Cognitive behavioral and behavioral therapy (including biofeedback, relaxation) | Mean ES = 0.5 across all domains (eg, pain, function, mood) | 7 |
Mullen et al57 | Arthritis | 15 controlled trials (13 randomized) | Not available | Psychoeducational interventions | Effect sizes: Pain = 0.20 Disability = 0.06 | 2 |
Murtagh & Greenwood58 | Insomnia | 66 controlled trials | 1,907 | Psychological treatments | Sleep latency = 0.87 Total sleep time = 0.49 Awakenings = 0.63 Sleep quality = 0.94 | 5 |
Scott et al59 | Childbirth | 11 randomized trials | 4,230 | Emotional support | Continuous support resulted in shorter labor (mean difference of −1.64 h), less analgesia (OR = 0.64), oxytocin (OR = 0.29), forceps (OR = 0.43) and cesarean section (OR = 0.49) | 4 |
Seers & Carroll60 | Acute pain | 7 randomized trials | 821 | Relaxation | Some weak evidence (3/7 studies) suggesting positive effect of relaxation | 5 |
Superio-Cabuslay61 | Osteoarthritis | 19 controlled trials | 3,148 | Patient education (eg, arthritis self-management program) | Effect sizes: Pain = 0.17 Disability = 0.03 Tender joints (RA) = 0.28 | 1 |
van Tulder et al62 | Low back pain | 20 randomized trials | 1,349 | Behavioral and cognitive-behavioral treatments | Effect sizes: Pain = 0.62 Functional status = 0.35 | 7 |
* Effect sizes are typically derived from Cohen’s d statistic,34 which represents the difference of the group means divided by their pooled standard deviation. Effect sizes therefore represent the difference between groups expressed in standard deviation units (ie, an effect size of 1.00 signifies a difference of one standard deviation in the outcome measure between the treatment and control groups). As suggested by Cohen, effect sizes between 0.20 and 0.50 are considered small, those between 0.50 and 0.80 moderate, and those greater than 0.80 large. Effect sizes in the behavioral sciences tend to be in the small to moderate range. In addition, even small effect sizes can represent important clinical phenomena, particularly when they represent changes in an outcome, such as mortality, or could potentially effect large numbers in the population.
ES = effect size, OR = odds ratio, RA = rheumatoid arthritis.