Internet-delivered cognitive and behavioral interventions help chronic pain

February 5, 2022

My previous post described a study that found no difference in efficacy among different types of psychosocial interventions for the treatment of chronic back pain. A recent 2020 Cochrane review concluded that there is strong evidence that face-to-face treatments based on cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) have a small beneficial effect on reducing pain, disability, and distress in people with chronic pain.

A meta-analysis just published in the journal Pain examined the efficacy of CBT delivered via the internet. Australian researchers examined 36 studies with 5778 participants. Most participants were female, and most studies recruited participants from community settings through online advertisements in Western countries.

They concluded that “internet-delivered cognitive and behavioural interventions can result in small significant improvements in interference/disability, depression, anxiety, pain intensity, self-efficacy and pain catastrophizing. Guided interventions may result in greater treatment effects for key outcomes in pain management, including interference/disability, anxiety and pain intensity.”

The meta-analysis showed that guidance by a clinician improves the results. However, this guidance varied across the studies in terms of
how it was provided (e.g., via secure email, SMS messages, telephone calls), the timing and frequency with which it is provided (e.g., weekly, on demand, or at set time points), the amount provided (e.g., brief versus extended), and the professional qualifications and experience of those providing it (e.g., students-in-training, registered psychologists, non-health professionals). There was no difference between the traditional CBT and ACT (acceptance-commitment therapy), confirming the results described in my previous post.

There are several sites that offer CBT courses over the internet. ThisWayUp.org.au and moodGYM.anu.edu.au, online-therapy.com, and others. During the pandemic almost all social workers and psychologists switched to virtual appointments. Lower cost is the advantage of self-directed online CBT courses.

Written by
Alexander Mauskop, MD
Continue reading
November 15, 2025
Cluster headaches
Cluster headaches and solar activity
It was an unusual week at the New York Headache Center. After months of relative calm, my schedule suddenly filled with cluster headache patients—one even consulting me virtually from Saudi Arabia. The influx came right after a G5-level geomagnetic storm, one of the strongest solar events in recent memory.
Read article
November 10, 2025
Alternative Therapies
A Week of Meditation Changes Brains and Bodies
A week-long meditation retreat produces dramatic changes in brain and metabolic functions
Read article
October 21, 2025
Alternative Therapies
Meditation is better than slow breathing exercise in reducing pain
A new study published in the journal PAIN by Dr. A. Amorim and her colleagues at the University of California San Diego examined how mindfulness meditation reduces pain. The findings help clarify whether mindfulness meditation is more effective than simple slow breathing for pain relief.
Read article