CBT-Fatigue
Cross-source consensus on CBT-Fatigue from 1 sources and 8 claims.
1 sources · 8 claims
Uses
Benefits
Risks & contraindications
Evidence quality
Other
Highlighted claims
- CBT-Fatigue was one of the three intervention categories included in the model. — Model-based economic evaluation of non-pharmacological interventions for fatigue in patients with long-term medical conditions in the UK
- Group CBT-Fatigue had an expected probabilistic intervention cost of £485. — Model-based economic evaluation of non-pharmacological interventions for fatigue in patients with long-term medical conditions in the UK
- Individual CBT-Fatigue had an expected probabilistic intervention cost of £810. — Model-based economic evaluation of non-pharmacological interventions for fatigue in patients with long-term medical conditions in the UK
- CBT-Fatigue had the largest evidence base across follow-up points and was the only intervention with long-term data from multiple condition types. — Model-based economic evaluation of non-pharmacological interventions for fatigue in patients with long-term medical conditions in the UK
- Individual CBT-Fatigue was the most expensive intervention because it required more staff contact time in frequency and session duration. — Model-based economic evaluation of non-pharmacological interventions for fatigue in patients with long-term medical conditions in the UK
- Individual CBT-Fatigue had a 63% probability of being cost-effective versus usual care. — Model-based economic evaluation of non-pharmacological interventions for fatigue in patients with long-term medical conditions in the UK
- CBT-Fatigue yielded an estimated QALY gain of 0.045, lower than mindfulness and physical activity promotion. — Model-based economic evaluation of non-pharmacological interventions for fatigue in patients with long-term medical conditions in the UK
- Individual CBT-Fatigue became not cost-effective under several pessimistic or higher-cost scenario assumptions. — Model-based economic evaluation of non-pharmacological interventions for fatigue in patients with long-term medical conditions in the UK