Mind-body therapies offer both physical and psychological skills for coping with cancer-related stress, such as pain, fatigue, anxiety, depression, and fear. Mindfulness practices, such as meditation and yoga, can reduce stress and improve concentration. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) helps patients to recognize, understand, and develop the skills to manage their thoughts and emotions, leading to better physical and emotional health. Studies have shown that these types of therapies can help improve symptoms such as fatigue, pain, and sleep disturbances. Generally, mind-body therapies can improve patient quality of life by reducing stress, depression, anxiety, insomnia, and fatigue. In addition, mind-body therapies may reduce emotional distress associated with cancer, improve self-efficacy and healing attitude, and help to cope with the psychological impact of cancer. The benefits of mind-body therapies are increasingly being recognized in the oncology setting and used as part of the holistic approach to cancer treatment. Many healthcare providers are now recommending mind-body therapies for their patients who are undergoing cancer treatment. Such therapies can be used as a complement to conventional medical therapies, or on their own to help patients better manage their symptoms. Mind-body therapies can be beneficial to cancer patients in many ways, helping them to cope with the physical and psychological effects of the disease and treatment.
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