Andy
Retired committee member
Open access, https://www.cochranelibrary.com/cdsr/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD007407.pub4/fullAuthors' conclusions
We found sufficient evidence across a large evidence base (59 studies, over 5000 participants) that CBT has small or very small beneficial effects for reducing pain, disability, and distress in chronic pain, but we found insufficient evidence to assess AEs. Quality of evidence for CBT was mostly moderate, except for disability, which we rated as low quality. Further trials may provide more precise estimates of treatment effects, but to inform improvements, research should explore sources of variation in treatment effects. Evidence from trials of BT and ACT was of moderate to very low quality, so we are very uncertain about benefits or lack of benefits of these treatments for adults with chronic pain; other treatments were not analysed. These conclusions are similar to our 2012 review, apart from the separate analysis of ACT.
Managing chronic pain in adults: the latest evidence on psychological therapies
https://www.evidentlycochrane.net/chronic-pain-psychological-therapies/In this blog for people affected by chronic pain and those who support and work with them, Dr. Amanda C de C Williams discusses the findings of her team’s latest Cochrane Review on psychological therapies.
Many people with chronic pain (or persistent pain, a term some prefer) feel misunderstood and offended when their GP or pain specialist suggest that they need ‘psychological treatment’: “The pain is real – it’s not in my head”. But psychological methods of treating chronic pain or, rather, treating the problems associated with chronic pain have been used for over 50 years. They are based on understanding the importance of the individual’s beliefs about what is causing the pain, fears about pain worsening over time, conflicting advice from clinicians, friends and family, and disappointment with successive failures of medical attempts to resolve the pain.
Psychological methods are not about ‘thinking positive’ or ‘mind over matter’, but about achieving a deeper understanding of pain and what affects it, about changing habits of thinking and of lifestyle: becoming (ideally) a person who, despite pain, lives a full life with confidence in managing that pain.
We recently updated our Cochrane systematic review ‘psychological therapies for the management of chronic pain (except headache) in adults’. Given how long these treatments have been around, this is not our first version of this review, but it is by far the biggest. This has 75 studies while our last version, in 2012, had 42. Since we started, NICE (National Institute for Health and Care Excellence) has developed guidelines for chronic pain in the UK, to be published early next year, which review some of the same evidence. The question of what works, and what doesn’t work, is important, given the size of the problem. A systematic review and meta-analysis of UK studies (Fayaz et al. 2016) provided an estimate that 10-14% of the adult population has moderately to severely disabling chronic pain.
PwME certainly suffer #CochranePain...
In this @CochraneUK blog for people affected by chronic pain and those who support and work with them, Dr. Amanda C de C Williams discusses the findings of her team’s latest Cochrane Review on psychological therapies: buff.ly/32BuGzb #CochranePain @CochranePaPaS
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