Psychological interventions for children with chronic physical conditions: a systematic review assessing the role of coping, emotional and cognitive processes

Psychological interventions for children with chronic physical conditions: a systematic review assessing the role of coping, emotional and cognitive processes

Authors
Kaemmerer, M. Luminet, O. Jeitani, C. Verwimp, C. Mallien, Z. Lahaye, M.
Year
2025
Journal
Psychology & Health
Volume
Pages
1-30
OBJECTIVES: Coping, emotional and cognitive processes are crucial in child development, particularly in children with pediatric chronic physical conditions (CPC). No systematic review in pediatric psychology has investigated the effectiveness of interventions on these processes concurrently. This review addresses this gap by focusing on the effectiveness of psychological interventions on coping, emotional and cognitive processes in children with CPCs. METHODS: Five electronic databases were searched for studies assessing at least one of these processes. Only randomized-controlled trials with children (8-12 years) with a CPC (e.g. diabetes, asthma), which implemented a psychological intervention were included. This study is registered in (CRD42021233505). RESULTS: Ten intervention studies were identified. While cognitive interventions (Cogmed) showed some improvements in working memory, the effects varied across studies despite similar methodologies. Coping interventions (e.g. Coping Skills Training) showed little effect on coping strategies or psychological health variables and were no more beneficial than control groups. No study trained coping, emotional processes and cognitive processes together. CONCLUSION: This review shows current limitations in evaluating psychological interventions targeting coping, cognitive or emotional processes in children with CPCs, limiting a comprehensive understanding of the interventions' action mechanisms. Systematically including underlying processes in intervention studies could help to better adjust those interventions.

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Type of intervention

Treatment and Child Welfare Interventions

Topic

Development and Life Coping Skills

Cognition

Well-being

Stress Management and Self-regulation

Biological Risk Factors, Diseases and Symptoms

Somatic Disease

Intervention

Psychological Treatments

Psychoeducational Interventions

Age group

School Aged Children (6-12 years)

Adolescents (13-18 years)

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