Non-Pharmacological Fatigue Interventions
Cross-source consensus on Non-Pharmacological Fatigue Interventions from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
Uses
Evidence quality
Highlighted claims
- The model evaluated physical activity promotion, CBT-Fatigue, and mindfulness as eligible intervention categories. — Model-based economic evaluation of non-pharmacological interventions for fatigue in patients with long-term medical conditions in the UK
- Eligible interventions required randomized trial evidence with long-term fatigue outcomes beyond three months after treatment ended. — Model-based economic evaluation of non-pharmacological interventions for fatigue in patients with long-term medical conditions in the UK
- Eligible interventions had to show a statistically significant difference versus usual care in the network meta-analysis at short-term or long-term follow-up. — Model-based economic evaluation of non-pharmacological interventions for fatigue in patients with long-term medical conditions in the UK
- Remote ischaemic conditioning was excluded because its evidence came from a single stroke study and was unlikely to generalise. — Model-based economic evaluation of non-pharmacological interventions for fatigue in patients with long-term medical conditions in the UK
- Interventions had to be generalisable across chronic conditions to be included in the economic model. — Model-based economic evaluation of non-pharmacological interventions for fatigue in patients with long-term medical conditions in the UK