Litcius/Paper detail

A randomized clinical trial of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy for women with irritable bowel syndrome—Effects and mechanisms.

Julia F. Henrich, Bergljot Gjelsvik, Christina Surawy, Emma Evans, Maryanne Martin

2020Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology49 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a chronic disorder of brain-gut interaction. Previous studies suggest that mindfulness could be therapeutic for IBS patients, however no study has evaluated the effects of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy adapted for patients with IBS (MBCT-IBS). A 6-week MBCT-IBS course was designed to reduce symptoms and increase quality of life. This study aimed to evaluate the effects of MBCT-IBS and to investigate its therapeutic mechanisms in a randomized controlled trial. METHOD: = 31) control condition. Patients completed standardized self-report measures of IBS symptom severity, IBS quality of life, maladaptive illness cognitions (catastrophizing, visceral anxiety sensitivity) and mindfulness at baseline, after 2 treatment sessions, at posttreatment, and at 6-week follow-up. Self-referential processing of illness and health was measured with an implicit association test (IAT). RESULTS: < .001) at follow-up compared with the WL. Changes in visceral anxiety sensitivity and pain catastrophizing at posttreatment and reductions in the IAT-score after 2 sessions combined with increases in nonjudgmental awareness at posttreatment mediated reductions in IBS symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: MBCT-IBS has the potential to reduce IBS symptoms and increase quality of life. MBCT-IBS may exert its effect on IBS symptoms via reducing maladaptive illness cognitions and activating changes in self-processing (reducing biases in self-referent processing of illness and health and increasing nonjudgmental awareness). (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

Irritable bowel syndromeMindfulnessMindfulness-based cognitive therapyRandomized controlled trialCognitive therapyCognitionQuality of life (healthcare)PsychologyCognitive behavioral therapyPsychotherapistClinical psychologyMedicineInternal medicinePhysical therapyPsychiatryGastrointestinal motility and disordersMindfulness and Compassion InterventionsMusic Therapy and Health