Springer Nature
Browse

The effects of telehealth-delivered mindfulness meditation, cognitive therapy, and behavioral activation for chronic low back pain: a randomized clinical trial

Posted on 2024-04-13 - 03:43
Abstract Background Chronic low back pain (CLBP) is a significant problem affecting millions of people worldwide. Three widely implemented psychological techniques used for CLBP management are cognitive therapy (CT), mindfulness meditation (MM), and behavioral activation (BA). This study aimed to evaluate the relative immediate (pre- to post-treatment) and longer term (pre-treatment to 3- and 6-month follow-ups) effects of group, videoconference-delivered CT, BA, and MM for CLBP. Methods This is a secondary analysis of a three-arm, randomized clinical trial comparing the effects of three active treatments—CT, BA, and MM—with no inert control condition. Participants were N = 302 adults with CLBP, who were randomized to condition. The primary outcome was pain interference, and other secondary outcomes were also examined. The primary study end-point was post-treatment. Intent-to-treat analyses were undertaken for each time point, with the means of the changes in outcomes compared among the three groups using an analysis of variance (ANOVA). Effect sizes and confidence intervals are also reported. Results Medium-to-large effect size reductions in pain interference were found within BA, CT, and MM (ds from − .71 to − 1.00), with gains maintained at both follow-up time points. Effect sizes were generally small to medium for secondary outcomes for all three conditions (ds from − .20 to − .71). No significant between-group differences in means or changes in outcomes were found at any time point, except for change in sleep disturbance from pre- to post-treatment, improving more in BA than MM (d =  − .49). Conclusions The findings from this trial, one of the largest telehealth trials of psychological treatments to date, critically determined that group, videoconference-delivered CT, BA, and MM are effective for CLBP and can be implemented in clinical practice to improve treatment access. The pattern of results demonstrated similar improvements across treatments and outcome domains, with effect sizes consistent with those observed in prior research testing in-person delivered and multi-modal psychological pain treatments. Thus, internet treatment delivery represents a tool to scale up access to evidence-based chronic pain treatments and to overcome widespread disparities in healthcare. Trial registration Clinicaltrials.gov, NCT03687762.

CITE THIS COLLECTION

DataCite
No result found
or
Select your citation style and then place your mouse over the citation text to select it.

SHARE

email

Usage metrics

BMC Medicine

AUTHORS (12)

  • Melissa A. Day
    Marcia A. Ciol
    M. Elena Mendoza
    Jeffrey Borckardt
    Dawn M. Ehde
    Andrea K. Newman
    Joy F. Chan
    Sydney A. Drever
    Janna L. Friedly
    John Burns
    Beverly E. Thorn
    Mark P. Jensen
need help?