A recent qualitative review by Wood, Froh, and Geraghty (2010) cast doubt on the efficacy
of gratitude interventions, suggesting the need to carefully attend to the quality
of comparison groups. Accordingly, in a series of meta-analyses, we evaluate the efficacy
of gratitude interventions (ks = 4-18; Ns = 395-1,755) relative to a measurement-only
control or an alternative-activity condition across 3 outcomes (i.e., gratitude, anxiety,
psychological well-being). Gratitude interventions outperformed a measurement-only
control on measures of psychological well-being (d = .31, 95% confidence interval
[CI = .04, .58]; k = 5) but not gratitude (d = .20; 95% CI [-.04, .44]; k = 4). Gratitude
interventions outperformed an alternative-activity condition on measures of gratitude
(d = .46, 95% CI [.27, .64]; k = 15) and psychological well-being (d = .17, 95% CI
[.09, .24]; k = 20) but not anxiety (d = .11, 95% CI [-.08, .31]; k = 5). More-detailed
subdivision was possible on studies with outcomes assessing psychological well-being.
Among these, gratitude interventions outperformed an activity-matched comparison (d
= .14; 95% CI [.01, .27]; k = 18). Gratitude interventions performed as well as, but
not better than, a psychologically active comparison (d = -.03, 95% CI [-.13, .07];
k = 9). On the basis of these findings, we summarize the current state of the literature
and make suggestions for future applied research on gratitude. (PsycINFO Database
Record