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Specific and common mediators of gastrointestinal symptom improvement in patients undergoing education/support vs. cognitive behavioral therapy for irritable bowel syndrome.

Jeffrey M. Lackner, James Jaccard

2021Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Findings suggest that CBT-induced GI symptom improvement may be mediated by a constellation of CBT-specific (IBS-SE) and nonspecific (task agreement, treatment expectancy) processes that reciprocally influence each other in complex ways to catalyze, improve, and sustain IBS symptom relief. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

Expectancy theoryIrritable bowel syndromeContext (archaeology)Cognitive behavioral therapyRandomized controlled trialPsychologyCognitive therapyMedicineCognitionClinical psychologyPhysical therapyInternal medicinePsychiatryBiologyPaleontologySocial psychologyGastrointestinal motility and disordersHealth, psychology, and well-beingComplementary and Alternative Medicine Studies
Specific and common mediators of gastrointestinal symptom improvement in patients undergoing education/support vs. cognitive behavioral therapy for irritable bowel syndrome. | Litcius