Yoga and relaxation interventions show non-significant effects on psychological outcomes in pediatric cancer caregivers
This systematic review and meta-analysis examined the effectiveness of yoga and relaxation-based interventions on psychological outcomes and quality of life among parents and caregivers of children diagnosed with cancer. The analysis included six studies with sample sizes ranging from 15 to 60 participants each. Comparator groups were not consistently reported across studies.
For state anxiety, the analysis found a non-significant effect (Hedges' g = -1.687, P = .092). Trait anxiety also showed a non-significant effect (Hedges' g = -1.701, P = .089). Depression outcomes showed a non-significant positive effect (Hedges' g = 0.747, P = .455), while stress showed a non-significant positive effect (Hedges' g = 0.973, P = .331). Quality of life showed no significant effect (Hedges' g = 0.714, P = .475).
Safety and tolerability data were not reported in the included studies. Key limitations include small sample sizes across all studies, methodological variability between interventions, and substantial statistical heterogeneity in the meta-analysis. The authors note the evidence remains insufficient and inconsistent.
Given their feasibility and low cost, yoga and relaxation interventions could be considered as supportive strategies to help parents cope with psychological demands of caregiving. However, clinicians should recognize the current evidence does not demonstrate statistically significant benefits across measured psychological outcomes. More rigorous research with larger samples is needed to determine effectiveness.