The impact of health and wellness coaching on patient-important outcomes in chronic illness care: A systematic review and meta-analysis.

Journal: Patient Education And Counseling
Published:
Abstract

Background: Health and Wellness Coaching (HWC) may be beneficial in chronic condition care. We sought to appraise its effectiveness on quality of life (QoL), self-efficacy (SE), depression, and anxiety.

Methods: We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, PsycINFO, and Cochrane CENTRAL for randomized trials published January 2005 - March 2023 that compared HWC to standard clinical care or another intervention without coaching. We examined QoL, SE, depression, or anxiety outcomes. Meta-analysis utilizing the random-effects model was used to estimate the pooled standardized mean difference (SMD).

Results: Thirty included studies demonstrated that HWC improved QoL within 3 months (SMD 0.62 95 % CI 0.22-1.02, p = 0.002), SE within 1.5 months (SMD 0.38, 95 % CI 0.03-0.73, p = 0.03), and depression at 3, 6, and 12 months (SMD 0.67, 95 % CI 0.13-1.20, p = 0.01), (SMD 0.72, 95 % CI 0.19-1.24, p = 0.006), and (SMD 0.41, 95 % CI 0.09-0.73, p = 0.01) Certainty in the evidence for most outcomes was either very low or low primarily due to the high risk of bias, heterogeneity, and imprecision.

Conclusion: HWC improves QoL, SE, and depression across chronic illness populations. Future research needs to standardize intervention reporting and outcome collection. Practice implications: Future HWC studies should standardize intervention components, reporting, and outcome measures, apply relevant chronic illness theories, and aim to follow participants for greater than one year.

Authors
Kasey Boehmer, Neri Álvarez Villalobos, Suzette Barakat, Humberto De Leon Gutierrez, Fernando Ruiz Hernandez, Gabriela Elizondo Omaña, Héctor Vaquera Alfaro, Sangwoo Ahn, Gabriela Spencer Bonilla, Michael Gionfriddo, Juan Millan Alanis, Marwan Abdelrahim, Larry Prokop, M Murad, Zhen Wang