Effectiveness of self‐compassion‐related interventions for reducing self‐criticism: a systematic review and meta‐analysis
Effectiveness of self‐compassion‐related interventions for reducing self‐criticism: a systematic review and meta‐analysis
Self-criticism is the process of negative self-evaluation. High levels are associated with psychopathology and poorer therapeutic outcomes. Self-compassion interventions were developed to explicitly target self-criticism. The aim of this review was to estimate the overall effect of self-compassion-related interventions on self-criticism outcomes and investigate potential moderating variables. A systematic search of the literature identified 20 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that met the inclusion criteria. Nineteen papers, involving 1350 participants, had sufficient data to be included in the meta-analysis. Pre- and post-data points were extracted for the compassion and control groups. Study quality was assessed using an adapted version of the Cochrane Collaboration's risk of bias tool, which concluded that studies were of moderate quality. Meta-analysis findings indicated that self-compassion-related interventions produce a significant, medium reduction in self-criticism in comparison with control groups (Hedges' g = 0.51, 95% CI [0.33–0.69]). Moderator analysis found greater reductions in self-criticism when self-compassion-related interventions were longer and compared with passive controls rather than active. The remaining moderators of forms of self-criticism, sample type, intervention delivery, intervention setting and risk of bias ratings were insignificant. Overall, the review provides promising evidence of the effectiveness of self-compassion-related interventions for reducing self-criticism. However, results are limited by moderate quality studies with high heterogeneity. Directions for future research indicate that more RCTs with active controls, follow-ups, consistent use and reporting of measures and diverse samples are needed.
Wakelin, Katherine E.
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Perman, Gemma
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Simonds, Laura M.
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January 2022
Wakelin, Katherine E.
0b1d4e39-377b-4a79-be7c-dabc21a4bcfa
Perman, Gemma
9168ca87-9b3c-49e7-916e-d13d8cb9c103
Simonds, Laura M.
12129840-f983-49cd-aa63-2393afa2fb92
Wakelin, Katherine E., Perman, Gemma and Simonds, Laura M.
(2022)
Effectiveness of self‐compassion‐related interventions for reducing self‐criticism: a systematic review and meta‐analysis.
Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy, 29 (1).
(doi:10.1002/cpp.2586).
Abstract
Self-criticism is the process of negative self-evaluation. High levels are associated with psychopathology and poorer therapeutic outcomes. Self-compassion interventions were developed to explicitly target self-criticism. The aim of this review was to estimate the overall effect of self-compassion-related interventions on self-criticism outcomes and investigate potential moderating variables. A systematic search of the literature identified 20 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that met the inclusion criteria. Nineteen papers, involving 1350 participants, had sufficient data to be included in the meta-analysis. Pre- and post-data points were extracted for the compassion and control groups. Study quality was assessed using an adapted version of the Cochrane Collaboration's risk of bias tool, which concluded that studies were of moderate quality. Meta-analysis findings indicated that self-compassion-related interventions produce a significant, medium reduction in self-criticism in comparison with control groups (Hedges' g = 0.51, 95% CI [0.33–0.69]). Moderator analysis found greater reductions in self-criticism when self-compassion-related interventions were longer and compared with passive controls rather than active. The remaining moderators of forms of self-criticism, sample type, intervention delivery, intervention setting and risk of bias ratings were insignificant. Overall, the review provides promising evidence of the effectiveness of self-compassion-related interventions for reducing self-criticism. However, results are limited by moderate quality studies with high heterogeneity. Directions for future research indicate that more RCTs with active controls, follow-ups, consistent use and reporting of measures and diverse samples are needed.
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Clin Psychology and Psychoth - 2021 - Wakelin - Effectiveness of self‐compassion‐related interventions for reducing
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Accepted/In Press date: 16 March 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 March 2021
Published date: January 2022
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Local EPrints ID: 501748
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/501748
PURE UUID: 1d0d76a2-c8c0-401e-a95c-db2b29e43477
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Date deposited: 09 Jun 2025 17:57
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:49
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Author:
Katherine E. Wakelin
Author:
Gemma Perman
Author:
Laura M. Simonds
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