Cognitive–behavioral therapy for management of mental health and stress-related disorders: Recent advances in techniques and technologies
Abstract Cognitive–behavioral therapy (CBT) helps individuals to eliminate avoidant and safety-seeking behaviors that prevent self-correction of faulty beliefs, thereby facilitating stress management to reduce stress-related disorders and enhance mental health. The present review evaluated the effec...
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doaj-f5ca2b9e4cf04b92ac023b6e87d8a5f22021-10-10T11:32:37ZengBMCBioPsychoSocial Medicine1751-07592021-10-011511410.1186/s13030-021-00219-wCognitive–behavioral therapy for management of mental health and stress-related disorders: Recent advances in techniques and technologiesMutsuhiro Nakao0Kentaro Shirotsuki1Nagisa Sugaya2Department of Psychosomatic Medicine, School of Medicine, International University of Health and WelfareGraduate School of Human and Social Sciences, Musashino UniversityUnit of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, School of Medicine, Yokohama City UniversityAbstract Cognitive–behavioral therapy (CBT) helps individuals to eliminate avoidant and safety-seeking behaviors that prevent self-correction of faulty beliefs, thereby facilitating stress management to reduce stress-related disorders and enhance mental health. The present review evaluated the effectiveness of CBT in stressful conditions among clinical and general populations, and identified recent advances in CBT-related techniques. A search of the literature for studies conducted during 1987–2021 identified 345 articles relating to biopsychosocial medicine; 154 (45%) were review articles, including 14 systemic reviews, and 53 (15%) were clinical trials including 45 randomized controlled trials. The results of several randomized controlled trials indicated that CBT was effective for a variety of mental problems (e.g., anxiety disorder, attention deficit hypersensitivity disorder, bulimia nervosa, depression, hypochondriasis), physical conditions (e.g., chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, irritable bowel syndrome, breast cancer), and behavioral problems (e.g., antisocial behaviors, drug abuse, gambling, overweight, smoking), at least in the short term; more follow-up observations are needed to assess the long-term effects of CBT. Mental and physical problems can likely be managed effectively with online CBT or self-help CBT using a mobile app, but these should be applied with care, considering their cost-effectiveness and applicability to a given population.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13030-021-00219-wBiopsychosocial approachCognitive–behavioral therapyStress management |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Mutsuhiro Nakao Kentaro Shirotsuki Nagisa Sugaya |
spellingShingle |
Mutsuhiro Nakao Kentaro Shirotsuki Nagisa Sugaya Cognitive–behavioral therapy for management of mental health and stress-related disorders: Recent advances in techniques and technologies BioPsychoSocial Medicine Biopsychosocial approach Cognitive–behavioral therapy Stress management |
author_facet |
Mutsuhiro Nakao Kentaro Shirotsuki Nagisa Sugaya |
author_sort |
Mutsuhiro Nakao |
title |
Cognitive–behavioral therapy for management of mental health and stress-related disorders: Recent advances in techniques and technologies |
title_short |
Cognitive–behavioral therapy for management of mental health and stress-related disorders: Recent advances in techniques and technologies |
title_full |
Cognitive–behavioral therapy for management of mental health and stress-related disorders: Recent advances in techniques and technologies |
title_fullStr |
Cognitive–behavioral therapy for management of mental health and stress-related disorders: Recent advances in techniques and technologies |
title_full_unstemmed |
Cognitive–behavioral therapy for management of mental health and stress-related disorders: Recent advances in techniques and technologies |
title_sort |
cognitive–behavioral therapy for management of mental health and stress-related disorders: recent advances in techniques and technologies |
publisher |
BMC |
series |
BioPsychoSocial Medicine |
issn |
1751-0759 |
publishDate |
2021-10-01 |
description |
Abstract Cognitive–behavioral therapy (CBT) helps individuals to eliminate avoidant and safety-seeking behaviors that prevent self-correction of faulty beliefs, thereby facilitating stress management to reduce stress-related disorders and enhance mental health. The present review evaluated the effectiveness of CBT in stressful conditions among clinical and general populations, and identified recent advances in CBT-related techniques. A search of the literature for studies conducted during 1987–2021 identified 345 articles relating to biopsychosocial medicine; 154 (45%) were review articles, including 14 systemic reviews, and 53 (15%) were clinical trials including 45 randomized controlled trials. The results of several randomized controlled trials indicated that CBT was effective for a variety of mental problems (e.g., anxiety disorder, attention deficit hypersensitivity disorder, bulimia nervosa, depression, hypochondriasis), physical conditions (e.g., chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, irritable bowel syndrome, breast cancer), and behavioral problems (e.g., antisocial behaviors, drug abuse, gambling, overweight, smoking), at least in the short term; more follow-up observations are needed to assess the long-term effects of CBT. Mental and physical problems can likely be managed effectively with online CBT or self-help CBT using a mobile app, but these should be applied with care, considering their cost-effectiveness and applicability to a given population. |
topic |
Biopsychosocial approach Cognitive–behavioral therapy Stress management |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13030-021-00219-w |
work_keys_str_mv |
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