Author:
Cristea Ioana A.,Kok Robin N.,Cuijpers Pim
Abstract
BackgroundCognitive bias modification (CBM) interventions are strongly advocated in
research and clinical practice.AimsTo examine the efficiency of CBM for clinically relevant outcomes, along
with study quality, publication bias and potential moderators.MethodWe included randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of CBM interventions that
reported clinically relevant outcomes assessed with standardised
instruments.ResultsWe identified 49 trials and grouped outcomes into anxiety and depression.
Effect sizes were small considering all the samples, and mostly
non-significant for patient samples. Effect sizes became non-significant
when outliers were excluded and after adjustment for publication bias.
The quality of the RCTs was suboptimal.ConclusionsCBM may have small effects on mental health problems, but it is also very
well possible that there are no significant clinically relevant effects.
Research in this field is hampered by small and low-quality trials, and
by risk of publication bias. Many positive outcomes are driven by extreme
outliers.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
457 articles.
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