Key Highlights
Medicine · Clinical Medicine
This study assessed whether self-directed cognitive behavioral therapy for chronic pain (CBT-CP) with asynchronous, audio-recorded personalized feedback is more effective in reducing pain than usual clinical care. The findings provide evidence for a scalable, non-pharmacological intervention that could expand access to evidence-based pain management. For a medical student focused on clinically relevant research, this demonstrates how technology-enabled therapy could improve patient outcomes and inform acute care decision-making in chronic pain management.
Novelty: 82%
Rigor: 90%
Significance: 85%
Validity: 88%
Clarity: 91%
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