Relations (1)
related 2.32 — strongly supporting 4 facts
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy is related to follow-up as it is the specific time point used to evaluate the long-term efficacy of the therapy across various clinical outcomes, including anxiety, depression, and pain management, as detailed in [1], [2], [3], and [4].
Facts (4)
Sources
A systematic review of cognitive behavioral therapy-based ... frontiersin.org 4 facts
measurementCognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) interventions for anxiety were evaluated across 6 studies, involving 270 participants in the intervention group and 255 in the control group, with 83% of studies showing positive results at post-treatment and 75% at follow-up.
claimCognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) shows evidence of benefit in improving pain interference and pain acceptance at post-treatment, but not at follow-up, with small effect sizes (Buhrman et al., 2015; Gasslander et al., 2022).
measurementCompared to Treatment As Usual (TAU), traditional Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) reported significant differences in the reduction of depressive and anxiety symptoms and in the increase of quality of life at post-treatment and at follow-up, with effect sizes ranging from very large to small.
claimStudies exploring pain intensity and pain catastrophizing found no significant differences between traditional Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) and Treatment As Usual (TAU) at post-treatment and follow-up.