Relations (1)
related 2.00 — strongly supporting 3 facts
Anxiety and pain interference are both identified as key clinical outcomes measured in systematic reviews evaluating the efficacy of psychological interventions, as evidenced by [1] and [2], and were specifically compared in the study by Torrijos-Zarcero et al. mentioned in [3].
Facts (3)
Sources
A systematic review of cognitive behavioral therapy-based ... frontiersin.org 3 facts
claimA single study (Torrijos-Zarcero et al., 2021) indicated significant differences in anxiety, pain interference, pain acceptance, pain catastrophizing, and self-compassion at post-treatment in favor of Mindfulness-Based Interventions (MBI) compared to Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT).
claimThe systematic review explored pain-related variables (pain interference, pain intensity, pain acceptance, pain catastrophizing, and pain self-efficacy), emotional functioning (depression, anxiety, and stress), health-related quality of life, behavioral activation, and psychological flexibility.
claimThe systematic review measured outcomes including pain-related variables (pain interference, intensity, acceptance, catastrophizing, and self-efficacy), emotional functioning (depression, anxiety, and stress), health-related quality of life, behavioral activation, and psychological flexibility.