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Evidence-based mindfulness

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

M. Maldonado Fernandez*
Affiliation:
Hospital Vital Alvarez Buylla, ENT Department, Mieres, Spain
L. Rubio Rodriguez
Affiliation:
Hospital de Cabueñes/Fundación Hospital de Jove, Psychiatry, Gijón, Spain
J. López Fernández
Affiliation:
Hospital Vital Alvarez Buylla, Psychiatry, Mieres, Spain
*
* Corresponding author.

Abstract

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Introduction

Mindfulness is a form of meditation that cultivates present moment awareness in a non-judging way. It has a Buddhist origin but has been practiced in the last 40 years without relation to any religious belief. It has been proposed as a treatment for a variety of ailments.

Objectives

To carry out an overview of systematic reviews of the evidence on mindfulness as a therapeutic tool.

Aims

To summarize the existing evidence on the efficacy of mindfulness.

Methods

We searched for systematic reviews in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (Cochrane Library).

Results

We found nine Cochrane reviews (for fibromyalgia, aggressiveness in intellectually disabled people, mechanical neck disorders, reducing sedentariness at work, anxiety, somatoform disorders, and post-stroke fatigue), two Cochrane review protocols (stress reduction of patients with breast cancer, and substance use disorders), 50 non-Cochrane reviews (29 provisional abstracts and 21 structured abstracts from the Centre for Reviews and Dissemination) on the efficacy of mindfulness. The Cochrane reviews showed a lack of conclusive evidence for fibromyalgia, aggressiveness in intellectually disabled people, anxiety disorders, somatoform disorders and post-stroke fatigue. Mindfulness training induced a non-significant reduction in workplace sitting time. For chronic neck pain, mindfulness exercises minimally improved function but no global effect was perceived at short term.

Conclusions

According to the existing Cochrane reviews, there is a general lack of evidence mindfulness as an effective treatment. For chronic neck pain, mindfulness exercises minimally improved function. We have detected important areas where high quality clinical trials are needed.

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
EV1404
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2016
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