Relations (1)
related 4.32 — strongly supporting 7 facts
The relationship between anxiety and quality of life is established through numerous clinical studies and longitudinal research, such as those by Hohls et al. [1] and Brenes [2], which consistently identify anxiety as a significant factor impacting the quality of life in various patient populations, particularly those with breast cancer [3], [4], and [5].
Facts (7)
Sources
A systematic review of cognitive behavioral therapy-based ... frontiersin.org 3 facts
claimTraditional cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) improves depression, anxiety, and quality of life in patients with comorbid chronic pain and clinically relevant psychological distress, but does not improve pain intensity or pain catastrophizing.
claimCBT-based interventions were more effective than control groups in improving depression, anxiety, and quality of life at both post-treatment and follow-up, but not in improving pain intensity, according to the systematic review.
claimThe systematic review concludes that traditional Cognitive Behavioral Therapy may produce significant benefits for the improvement of depression, anxiety, and quality of life, but not for pain intensity and pain catastrophizing.
Autistic Self-Advocacy and the Neurodiversity Movement - Frontiers frontiersin.org 2 facts
claimMcConachie et al. (2015) assert that researchers need robust and creative methods to measure intervention outcomes for children with all levels of communication ability, specifically focusing on autonomy, quality of life, functional communication, inertia, and anxiety.
claimMcConachie et al. (2015) argue that researchers need robust and creative methods to measure intervention outcomes in children with all levels of communication ability, specifically focusing on autonomy, quality of life, and variables like functional communication, inertia, and anxiety.
The influence of cancer treatments on long-term psychological ... link.springer.com 1 fact
referenceNg et al. (2015) conducted a 1-year prospective study on anxiety, depression, perceived social support, and quality of life in Malaysian breast cancer patients.
The effects of screen time on children: The latest research parents ... health.choc.org 1 fact
claimExcessive screen time in preteens and teens is associated with higher anxiety, depression symptoms, lower quality of life, lower psychological well-being, lower school functioning, lower academic achievement, lower self-esteem, poor language achievement, and poor math achievement.