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Effects of hypnosis, cognitive therapy, hypnotic cognitive therapy, and pain education in adults with chronic pain: a randomized clinical trial

Mark P. Jensen, M. Elena Mendoza, Dawn M. Ehde, David R. Patterson, Ivan Molton, Tiara Dillworth, Kevin J. Gertz, Joy F. Chan, Shahin Hakimian, Samuel L. Battalio, Marcia A. Ciol

2020Pain69 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Chronic pain is a significant health problem worldwide with limited pharmacological treatment options. This study evaluated the relative efficacy of 4 treatment sessions each of 4 nonpharmacological treatments: (1) hypnotic cognitive therapy (using hypnosis to alter the meaning of pain); (2) standard cognitive therapy; (3) hypnosis focused on pain reduction, and (4) pain education. One hundred seventy-three individuals with chronic pain were randomly assigned to receive 4 sessions of 1 of the 4 treatments. Primary (pain intensity) and secondary outcome measures were administered by assessors unaware of treatment allocation at pretreatment, posttreatment, and 3-, 6-, and 12-month follow-up. Treatment effects were evaluated using analysis of variance, a generalized estimating equation approach, or a Fisher exact test, depending on the outcome domain examined. All 4 treatments were associated with medium to large effect size improvements in pain intensity that maintained up to 12 months posttreatment. Pretreatment to posttreatment improvements were observed across the 4 treatment conditions on the secondary outcomes of pain interference and depressive symptoms, with some return towards pretreatment levels at 12-month follow-up. No significant between-group differences emerged in omnibus analyses, and few statistically significant between-group differences emerged in the planned pairwise analyses, although the 2 significant effects that did emerge favored hypnotic cognitive therapy. Future research is needed to determine whether the significant differences that emerged are reliable.

Topics & Concepts

HypnosisMedicineChronic painCognitionPhysical therapyRandomized controlled trialCognitive therapyHypnoticPain catastrophizingAnesthesiaInternal medicinePsychiatryAlternative medicinePathologyPain Management and Placebo EffectMusculoskeletal pain and rehabilitationPediatric Pain Management Techniques
Effects of hypnosis, cognitive therapy, hypnotic cognitive therapy, and pain education in adults with chronic pain: a randomized clinical trial | Litcius