Review
Copyright ©The Author(s) 2017.
World J Cardiol. May 26, 2017; 9(5): 396-406
Published online May 26, 2017. doi: 10.4330/wjc.v9.i5.396
Table 1 Representative studies examining the effects of cognitive behavioral therapy and motivational interviewing on health-related outcomes
Ref.PopulationInterventionOutcome
Tsiros et al[33], 2008n = 47 adolescents with overweight or obesityCBT vs no-treatmentGreater improvements in weight, BMI, body fat, sugar intake (soft drinks) in CBT group at 20-wk follow-up
Welschen et al[34], 2013n = 154 diabetes patientsCBT vs managed careGreater improvement in physical activity, quality of life, and depression in CBT group at 6-mo follow-up; no group differences at 12-mo follow-up
Freedland et al[39], 2009n = 123 CABG patients with depressionCBT vs supportive stress managementGreater depression remission in CBT than supportive stress management group at 3-mo and 9-mo follow-up
Berkman et al[48], 2003n = 2481 MI patientsCBT vs usual careGreater improvement in depression and social support in CBT group at 6-mo follow-up; no group differences in survival at 29-mo follow-up
Woollard et al[55], 1995n = 166 patients with hypertensionMI low dose vs MI high dose vs usual careGreater improvements in alcohol and salt intake in low-MI vs usual care; greater improvements in weight and blood pressure in high-MI vs usual care at 18-wk follow-up
Ma et al[59], 2014n = 120 Chinese patients with hypertensionMI vs usual careGreater improvements in treatment adherence and blood pressure in MI group
Ogedegbe et al[60], 2008n = 190 African American patients with hypertensionMI vs usual careGreater improvements in medication adherence and blood pressure in the MI group at 12-mo follow-up
Cain et al[68], 2011n = 104 adolescentsMI and sleep education vs no interventionGreater improvements in sleep knowledge and out-of-bed time in MI group; improvements in sleep and daytime functioning in both groups