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Mind-body practices for people living with HIV: a systematic scoping review.

BMC complementary and alternative medicine
January 1, 1970
Maria Pilar Ramirez-Garcia et al. (6 authors)
Journal ArticleScoping ReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to map available evidence on the efficacy of mind-body practices, including mindfulness, in people living with HIV.

Results Summary

Mindfulness, along with a combination of relaxation techniques and cognitive behavioral strategies, showed encouraging results in reducing physical and psychological symptoms and improving quality of life and health in people living with HIV. However, more rigorous studies are needed to confirm these findings.

Population

People living with HIV

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (6)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
mindfulness
decrease
physical and psychological symptoms
people living with HIV
-
show encouraging results in decreasing
#1
a combination of least three relaxation techniques and cognitive behavioral strategies
decrease
physical and psychological symptoms
people living with HIV
-
show encouraging results in decreasing
#2
yoga
decrease
physical and psychological symptoms
people living with HIV
-
show encouraging results in decreasing
#3
mindfulness
increase
quality of life and health
people living with HIV
-
show encouraging results in improving
#4
a combination of least three relaxation techniques and cognitive behavioral strategies
increase
quality of life and health
people living with HIV
-
show encouraging results in improving
#5
yoga
increase
quality of life and health
people living with HIV
-
show encouraging results in improving
#6
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Mind-body practices are frequently used by people living with HIV to reduce symptoms and improve wellbeing. These include Tai Chi, Qigong, yoga, meditation, and all types of relaxation. Although there is substantial research on the efficacy of mind-body practices in people living with HIV, there is no summary of the available evidence on these practices. The aim of this scoping review is to map available evidence of mind-body practices in people living with HIV. METHODS: The Arksey and O'Malley (Int J Soc Res Methodol 8:19-32, 2005) methodological framework was used. A search of 16 peer-review and grey literature databases, websites, and relevant journals (1983-2015) was conducted. To identify relevant studies, two reviewers independently applied the inclusion criteria to all abstracts or full articles. Inclusion criteria were: participants were people living with HIV; the intervention was any mind-body practice; and the study design was any research study evaluating one or several of these practices. Data extraction and risk of bias assessment were performed by one reviewer and checked by a second, as needed, using the criteria that Cochrane Collaboration recommends for systematic reviews of interventions (Higgins and Green, Cochrane handbook for systematic reviews of intervention. 2011). A tabular and narrative synthesis was carried out for each mind-body practice. RESULTS: One hundred thirty-six documents drawing on 84 studies met the inclusion criteria. The most widely studied mind-body practice was a combination of least three relaxation techniques (n = 20), followed in declining order by meditation (n = 17), progressive muscle relaxation (n = 10), yoga (n = 9) and hypnosis (n = 8). Slightly over half (47/84) of studies used a RCT design. The interventions were mainly (46/84) conducted in groups and most (51/84) included daily individual home practice. All but two studies were unblinded to participants. CONCLUSION: The amount of available research on mind-body practices varies by practice. Almost half of the studies in this review were at high risk of bias. However, mindfulness, a combination of least three relaxation techniques and cognitive behavioral strategies, and yoga show encouraging results in decreasing physical and psychological symptoms and improving quality of life and health in people living with HIV. More rigorous studies are necessary to confirm the results of Tai Chi, Qigong, and some relaxation techniques.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
HIV InfectionsHumansMind-Body Therapies
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy75/10
Quality70/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations17
Citations/Year2.8
Relative Citation Ratio1.39
NIH Percentile62.4%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score1.59
Normalized Score0.64
Related Supplements
Mind-body practices for people living with HIV: a systematic... | Panacea Index