Abstract
ABSTRACT Comorbid psychological problems are commonly related to chronic pain but addressing heterogeneous comorbidities in traditional settings is often difficult. Delivering individually tailored treatment using the internet could be a viable alternative. The present study investigates whether a guided, individually tailored and internet-delivered cognitive behavioral therapy (ICBT) could improve mood and reduce disability in individuals suffering from chronic pain and comorbid psychological distress. Participants were recruited from a pain clinic and randomized to either ICBT or waiting list. The participants (n = 187) individually tailored treatments included 6–13 modules targeting different types of psychological distress. Modules were designed to be completed weekly, and feedback was provided by clinicians. Participants completed an average of 5.1 (49.7%) modules, with 22.9% completing all assigned modules. Intention-to-treat analyses showed significantly larger improvements in depression, disability, pain acceptance, catastrophizing, and quality of life in the ICBT-group compared to the control group. Between-group effect sizes were very small or small at post for the primary outcomes depression (d = 0.18) and pain interference (d = 0.22). Other effect sizes ranged from very small to small, with the largest effect being improvements in pain acceptance (d = 0.3). All significant changes were stable at 12-month follow up.
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