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Effectiveness of Mindfulness-Based Art Therapy on Healthy Quality of Life in Women with Breast Cancer.

Asia-Pacific journal of oncology nursing
May 5, 2019
Zeinab Jalambadani et al. (2 authors)
Journal ArticleHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to determine the effectiveness of mindfulness-based art therapy (MBAT) in improving quality of life for women with breast cancer in Neyshabur, Iran.

Results Summary

The MBAT group showed significant reductions in distress symptoms and improvements in health-related quality of life, particularly in psychological well-being, compared to the control group. Physical health and environmental quality of life also improved, though social relationships showed the least improvement.

Population

114 women with breast cancer (any stage) in Iran, paired by age.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

12 weeks

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (4)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
mindfulness-based art therapy (MBAT)
decrease
symptoms of distress
Neyshabur women with breast cancer
-
demonstrated a significant decrease
#1
mindfulness-based art therapy (MBAT)
increase
key aspects of the health-related quality of life
Neyshabur women with breast cancer
-
demonstrated significant improvements
#2
MBAT interventions
increase
quality of life behaviors
women with breast cancer
P < 0.05
had a significant effect on improving
#3
MBAT
decrease
symptoms of women with breast cancer and quality of life
women with breast cancer
-
provides initial encouraging data that support a possible future role for the intervention as a psychosocial option for decrease
#4
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to determine the effectiveness of mindfulness-based art therapy (MBAT) in promoting quality of life in Neyshabur women with breast cancer. METHODS: This study was an interventional design that was conducted on 124 women with breast cancer (any stage) in Iran 2018. One hundred and fourteen women with breast cancer were paired by age and randomized to either 12-week MBAT intervention group or a wait-list-control group. One hundred and fourteen women with breast cancer completed both the pre-and post-study measurements. As compared to the control group, the MBAT group demonstrated a significant decrease in symptoms of distress and significant improvements in key aspects of the health-related quality of life (as measured by the World Health Organization Quality-of-Life - BREF questionnaire). RESULTS: The MBAT interventions had a significant effect on improving quality of life behaviors (P < 0.05). Among the dimensions of quality of life, the highest mean score was for subpsychological (18.14 ± 2.35), and the lowest score was achieved by the subdomains of social relationships (13.54 ± 1.12). The mean (standard deviation) scores of physical health and environment were 17.19 ± 3.55 and 16.10 ± 1.87, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: This investigation of MBAT provides initial encouraging data that support a possible future role for the intervention as a psychosocial option for decrease in symptoms of women with breast cancer and quality of life.

Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy85/10
Quality78/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations14
Citations/Year2.3
Relative Citation Ratio1.11
NIH Percentile54.1%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score2.18
Normalized Score0.70