Effects of cognitive combined with mindfulness-based stress reduction and sleep in patients with diabetes and endometrial cancer.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to determine whether mindfulness-based stress reduction, combined with cognitive behavioral therapy, could improve mood and sleep quality in patients with diabetes and endometrial cancer.
Results Summary
The study found that mindfulness-based stress reduction significantly improved mood (reducing negative mood scores and increasing positive mood scores) and sleep quality compared to the control group. Limitations include unclear blinding procedures and a relatively short follow-up period (3 months).
Population
90 patients with diabetes, endometrial cancer, and depression (45 in the control group, 45 in the observation group).
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Intervention duration not explicitly stated, but follow-up was performed 3 months after treatment completion.
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) | increase | mood state | patients with diabetes and endometrial cancer | - | significantly improved | #1 |
cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) | increase | sleep quality | patients with diabetes and endometrial cancer | - | significantly improved | #2 |
mindfulness-based stress reduction | increase | mood state | patients with diabetes and endometrial cancer | - | significantly improved | #3 |
mindfulness-based stress reduction | increase | sleep quality | patients with diabetes and endometrial cancer | - | significantly improved | #4 |
cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) | decrease | 5 negative mood scores | patients with diabetes, endometrial cancer, and depression | - | lower | #5 |
mindfulness-based stress reduction | increase | 2 positive mood scores | patients with diabetes, endometrial cancer, and depression | - | higher | #6 |
mindfulness-based stress reduction | decrease | 7 sleep quality scores | patients with diabetes, endometrial cancer, and depression | - | lower | #7 |
mindfulness-based stress reduction | decrease | Pittsburgh sleep quality index scale total score | patients with diabetes, endometrial cancer, and depression | - | lower | #8 |
breathing relaxation | increase | mood state | patients with diabetes and endometrial cancer | - | significantly improved | #9 |
breathing relaxation | increase | sleep quality | patients with diabetes and endometrial cancer | - | significantly improved | #10 |
BACKGROUND: Seek highly effective treatment measures for improving mood and sleep. AIM: To explore the effects of mood and depression in patients with endometrial cancer after cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and mindfulness-based stress reduction. METHODS: In a prospective study, 90 patients with diabetes, endometrial cancer, and depression were selected from January 2023 to January 2024 in our hospital. There were 45 patients in the control group and 45 patients in the observation group. In addition to the conventional treatment, the control group received cognitive behavioral treatment, and the observation group: Control group was given to compare changes in mood state and sleep quality before and after the intervention. Follow-up was performed3 months after treatment completion. RESULTS: Before treatment, the mood and sleep quality scores between the two groups (P > 0.05); in the observation group, the 5 negative mood scores were lower and lower than the control group; the 2 positive mood scores were higher than in the control group, and the difference was statistically significant (P < 0.05); compared with before treatment, the 7 sleep quality scores and Pittsburgh sleep quality index scale total score in the observation group and lower in the control group (P < 0.05). CONCLUSION: In patients with diabetes and endometrial cancer, mood state and sleep quality significantly improved after CBT and breathing relaxation. These findings provide new and effective treatment strategies in clinical practice.