Review Systematic review and meta-analysis of standalone digital interventions for cognitive symptoms in people without dementia 2024 Cabreira, Stone, Carson

Andy

Retired committee member
Abstract

Cognitive symptoms are prevalent across neuropsychiatric disorders, increase distress and impair quality of life. Self-guided digital interventions offer accessibility, scalability, and may overcome the research-to-practice treatment gap. Seventy-six trials with 5214 participants were identified. A random-effects meta-analysis investigated the effects of all digital self-guided interventions, compared to controls, at post-treatment.

We found a small-to-moderate positive pooled effect on cognition (k = 71; g = −0.51, 95%CI −0.64 to −0.37; p < 0.00001) and mental health (k = 30; g = −0.41, 95%CI −0.60 to −0.22; p < 0.0001). Positive treatment effects on fatigue (k = 8; g = −0.27, 95%CI −0.53 to −0.02; p = 0.03) and quality of life (k = 22; g = −0.17, 95%CI −0.34 to −0.00; p = 0.04) were only marginally significant. No significant benefit was found for performance on activities of daily living. Results were independent of control groups, treatment duration, risk of bias and delivery format.

Self-guided digital transdiagnostic interventions may benefit at least a subset of patients in the short run, yet their impact on non-cognitive outcomes remains uncertain.

Open access, https://www.nature.com/articles/s41746-024-01280-9
 
Results were independent of control groups, treatment duration, risk of bias and delivery format
When you are getting similar results with or without controlling for confounding effects, you are most likely not actually controlling for confounding effects. They understand this. They don't care. Complete double standards.

They find no benefits. 76 trials! Still recommend it. This is insane.
 
Conclusion said:
Newer methods like virtual reality appear promising to improve functional domains, but further research under routine conditions is needed to propel the field forward and ensure the delivery of evidence-based care to patients experiencing cognitive symptoms

Ad infinitum.
 
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