Mindfulness: What It Is and How It Is Impacting Healthcare

Raski MP. Mindfulness: What It Is and How It Is Impacting Healthcare. UBCMJ. 2015: 7.1 (56-59).

Matias P. Raski

Abstract

The following is a review of literature concerning the place of mindfulness, a non-judging present-moment awareness, and techniques by which to invoke it, in Canadian healthcare. Central to the discussion are the effects of mindfulness on personal and interpersonal wellbeing. A recent surge of research has found mindfulness to positively impact a wide range of measures of personal health including stress, anxiety, affect, and healthy lifestyle choices. At present, mindfulness-based interventions have been confirmed effective for the treatment of chronic pain, psoriasis, and a number of psychiatric illnesses, and are possibly helpful for the prevention of cognitive decline. Mindfulness also presents benefits to interpersonal relationships by promoting empathy, compassion and attentiveness reflected in the enhanced patient-centeredness with which mindful physicians conduct their clinical practice. As such, mindfulness training among healthcare providers is advocated for the improvement of quality of care as well as a means to mitigate work-related stress and burnout. The underlying mechanisms of the effects of mindfulness are also discussed, with emphasis on present-moment attentiveness and a disempowerment of one’s maladaptive cognitions allowing the individual to act with intention and care rather than out of habit and impulse. Given the potential for mindfulness to promote health and enrich the practice of medicine, its increased utilization among patients, physicians, and the population at large is encouraged.

Introduction

What is Mindfulness?

Mindfulness is a concept derived from Buddhist tradition. It is a central component of an ancient school of thought concerning human suffering and ways to bring about its cessation. (1) It is characterized by Jon Kabat-Zinn (2) – a foremost pioneer in introducing mindfulness to medicine – as a nonjudgmental, curious, and self-compassionate awareness of one’s moment-to-moment experience. It is an active and deliberate regulation of one’s attention so as to focus it on the many cognitive events – sensations, thoughts, emotions, and so on – that occur within the field of consciousness at any given moment. Further, it is to manifest a nonjudgmental orientation toward these cognitions, treating them not as things to be liked and disliked, or pursued and resisted, but rather as objects of observation to simply acknowledge and accept as they are. (3)

 In recent decades, research interest in mindfulness has grown. (4,5) While mindfulness practices are diverse – yoga, tai chi, and various prayer and chanting exercises present a few examples – meditation has been the primary object of our scientific study. (6) Mindfulness meditation is the deliberate evocation of mindfulness, usually in a state of physical stillness, (7) and was first introduced to the Western medical lens with the establishment of Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) therapy in American clinics and hospitals in the 1980s. (7) MBSR is a secular therapy that seeks to develop participants’ mindfulness skills through meditation practice. (7) MBSR’s success in the management of chronic pain spurred the development of a considerable body of literature exploring the impact of mindfulness training on human psychology and physiology. (6)

The Health Benefits of Mindfulness

This research has confirmed millennia-old reports (6) of mindfulness as a powerful promoter of personal and interpersonal health. First, it is now generally accepted that mindfulness training can promote long-standing increases in positive affect and reductions in anxiety, negative affect, (8,9,10), emotional reactivity, (11) and stress. (12,13) Second, it is reported to increase empathy and compassion (14) and promote a sense of connectedness with others. (15) Third, it has emerged as a predictor of various health-determining lifestyle choices, including diet, (16) exercise, (16) and substance use. (17,18,19) Fourth, the act of meditation itself is associated with increased parasympathetic tone and related decreases in heart rate, blood pressure, blood cortisol, breathing rate, skin conductance, and muscle tension. (20) Finally, a number of mindfulness training studies (21,22,23) in patient populations report enhanced immune function as measured by cytokine expression, (21, 22), leukocyte quantities, (21, 22), and antibody titers in response to vaccination. (23) Together, these findings suggest not only a capacity of mindfulness to promote subjective well-being, but also a preventive effect on stress- and hypertension-mediated pathologies, as well as the possibility of enhanced immunoprotection from viral and bacterial diseases.

Principles and Mechanisms of Mindfulness

How is mindfulness doing all of this? The cognitive and neurobiological mechanisms underlying the benefits of mindfulness training are undoubtedly complex, and while a number of compelling models have been proposed (for review, see Hölzel et al (20)), our understanding of these mechanisms remains rudimentary. Even so, because mindfulness is a conscious psychological process, (3) we stand to learn a great deal about it by reflecting upon the conscious experiences of mindful people. In one account of personal reflection, Krasner (24) writes:

“What mindfulness-based interventions ask of the participants … is to consciously shift [the] locus of control internally, acknowledge and accept whatever challenges arise, and apply wise attention to the challenges without judgment in the present moment … It is through the cultivation of this awakened state that one begins to see the perceptual distortions of unexamined thoughts, feelings, and sensations. In doing so, one recognizes how these distortions drive the engine of behaviour and choices and how this results in movement toward states of greater disease.”

A number of interesting changes are thought to occur with this sort of insight. One such change, as Krasner alludes to, is that maladaptive cognitions tend to lose their power in guiding behaviour. Brewer et al (25) illustrate this notion with the example of fictional Joe Smoker, who, upon experiencing a craving for a cigarette, might bring mindful awareness to the sensations and perceptions that comprise his craving and just observe them from moment to moment. The craving itself and any judgments surrounding it become merely objects of curious and wide-eyed observation, and in this process lose their salience as driving forces for behaviour.

A similar principle applies not only to overt behaviour, but to our maladaptive cognitions themselves. As Crane et al (26) explain, becoming mindful represents a paradigm shift in the ‘mode of mind’ in which we operate: we disengage from a ruminative avoidant mode of processing and engage with an acceptance-based, approach-oriented mode anchored in present-moment awareness. In this mode we are better able to notice and reflect upon our thought processes, and, to an extent, deliberately let go of those we find maladaptive.

In considering the interpersonal effects of mindfulness, Bihari and Mullan (27) come to important insights in their 2014 qualitative study of the effects of mindfulness training on participants’ relationships. These authors suggest that mindfulness incites an enhanced awareness of one’s tendencies to react automatically to internal and external cues in interpersonal situations. This allows one to act less out of habit and impulse, and more out of conscious purpose. They also report an enhanced ability to engage in constructive, fruitful arguments and to “be with” another without submitting to urges to “fix” or avoid that person. These findings indicate a capacity of mindfulness to promote constructive and fulfilling interpersonal interactions and help avoid destructive and taxing ones.

Clinical Applications of Mindfulness

The potential clinical relevance of mindfulness training is not difficult to imagine, and its application to patients has grown considerably since the initial introduction of MBSR. (4,5) In psychiatry and clinical psychology, mindfulness training has come to play a central role in a number of distinct therapies concerning mood, (28,29) anxiety, (4) personality, (30) conduct (31) and substance use disorders. (32) MBSR itself has extended its reach from managing chronic pain to complementing a wide range of medical treatments as a means to reduce psychological comorbidities of illness. (8,33) Larouche et al’s 2015 review (34) suggests that mindfulness-based interventions, in their capacity to improve many of the risk factors for neurodegenerative cognitive decline (including stress, mood disturbance, and metabolic syndrome), show promise as preventive strategies for cognitive impairment and Alzheimer’s disease. Kabat-Zinn et al (35) report accelerated skin clearing among psoriasis patients who listened to a guided mindfulness meditation tape during their phototherapy sessions as compared to controls without the tape – a remarkable finding for psychosomatic medicine. Together, these findings make it clear that the clinical applicability of mindfulness is extensive and continued research in a variety of fields is warranted.

Mindfulness, Physician Distress and Quality of Care

Numerous groups (14,36,37,40) have turned their attention toward health care providers as a target population for mindfulness-based interventions to enhance stress resilience and overall well-being. Physicians, in particular, face many stressors in medical practice and thus many challenges in maintaining their own well-being. (36) Stress, anxiety, burnout, and compassion fatigue are common ailments (36) and they present substantial detriments to the quality of care a physician provides. (14) Burnout, characterized by a reduced sense of accomplishment, emotional exhaustion, and depersonalization, (37) is reported by as many as 30% to 40% of practicing physicians at a given time (38) and by up to 60% as having been experienced at some point in their careers. (37, 39) Burnout is related to a less patient-centered approach to care, (37) reduced empathy and compassion, (36) and leads to increased medical errors. (36) As a result, burnout influences patients’ recovery times, (14) compliance with therapies, confidence in their physicians, (36) and overall satisfaction with their care. (36)

Fortney et al (40) suggest that mindfulness presents a particularly suitable and appealing option for physicians as a means to deal with distress in that it directly addresses meaning in life and work but is entirely secular and firmly founded in empiricism. Indeed, a growing body of evidence (40,41,42,43) suggests that mindfulness training is effective in reducing indicators of burnout, depression, anxiety, and stress and improving indicators of well-being, vigor, empathy, and stress-resilience among physicians, other health care professionals, and medical students. Although this field of research is young and much of the data is only quasi-experimental, (44) these findings indicate the promise of mindfulness training as a means to mitigate distress among healthcare providers and improve quality of care.

How might we understand these changes in healthcare providers’ well-being and proficiency? In his reflections upon mindful physicians, Epstein (45) suggests that the critical self-reflection essential to mindfulness enables physicians to listen attentively and presently to their patients’ distress; recognize their own errors; make evidence-based decisions; and act with technical competence, insight, and compassion. Beach et al (42) find that mindfulness among physicians is associated with patient-centered communication and an increased likelihood to consider a range of possible explanations in stressful situations. Further, Beach et al report an enhanced approach attitude among mindful physicians – a capacity to respond consciously and engage with distressing situations rather than react automatically and withdraw from them. Together, these considerations lend us further indication that mindfulness may have an important role to play in promoting an effective, fulfilling, and human-centered practice of medicine.

Limitations of Mindfulness Training

Although most studies have shown encouraging results, mindfulness training sometimes fails to help participants and can potentially even do harm. (46) Reported adverse responses include panic attacks and intensified perceptions of pain, particularly among new practitioners. (46) Some authors (46,47) understand these responses as a result of encountering and attending – perhaps more fully than ever before – to certain burdensome mental events (e.g., traumatic memories or pain). (46) In addition, while no specific populations for whom mindfulness training is contraindicated have yet been uncovered, case reports of manic and psychotic episodes precipitated by meditation advise caution for certain psychiatric populations. (48)

Crane et al (26) emphasize teacher competence as a critical factor in allowing participants to respond adaptively to the arisal of unpleasant perceptions. By offering strategies for open acceptance of perceptions in real time and by themselves embodying the practice, (46) teachers may allow otherwise aversive experiences to become intense but valuable learning opportunities. Dobkin et al (46) also offer a set of guidelines for reducing the risks and maximizing the benefits of mindfulness training. These include pre-screening for psychiatric problems and ‘priming’ participants before training begins by informing them of potential challenges and ways to approach disconcerting perceptions if and when they arise.

Conclusions

The therapeutic applications of mindfulness are considerable and its impact on clinical practice itself appears to be profound. Indeed, several commentators (4,23,45,49) characterize mindfulness as inciting nothing short of a revolution in the way we conduct our mental lives both within the clinic and without. By continuing to encourage and teach mindfulness meditation and expand mindfulness training programs, we stand to enhance the health of patients and healthcare professionals alike, enrich the practice of medicine, and empower people to navigate their lives with skill, wisdom, and meaning. Given these findings, the continued investigation and realization of potential roles for mindfulness in healthcare is strongly encouraged.

References

  1. Bhikkhu, T. Satipatthana Sutta: Frames of reference [Internet]. 2008 [updated Nov 30 2013]. Available from: http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/mn/mn.010.than.html
  2. Kabat-Zinn J. Mindfulness-based interventions in context: past, present, and future. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice. 2003;10:144-156.
  3. Bishop SR, Lau M, Shapiro S, Carlson L, Anderson ND, Carmody J, Segal ZV, Abbey S, Speca M, Velting D, Devins G. Mindfulness: A proposed operational definition. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice. 2004;11:230-241.
  4. Jennings JL, Apsche JA. The evolution of a fundamentally mindfulness-based treatment methodology: From DBT and ACT to MDT and beyond. International Journal of Behavioural Consultation and Therapy. 2014;9(2):1-3.
  5. Baer RA. Mindfulness training as a clinical intervention: A conceptual and empirical review. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice. 2003;10:125-143.
  6. Boyce B. The mindfulness revolution: Leading psychologists, scientists, artists, and meditation teachers on the power of mindfulness in daily life. Boston: Shambhala Sun; 2011.
  7. Kabat-Zinn J, Lipworth L, Burney R. The clinical use of mindfulness meditation for the self-regulation of chronic pain. Journal of Behavioural Medicine. 1985;8:163-190.
  8. Shapiro SL, Carlson LE. The art and science of mindfulness: Integrating mindfulness into psychology and the helping professions. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association; 2009.
  9. Hofmann SG, Sawyer AT, Witt AA, Oh D. The effect of mindfulness-based therapy on anxiety and depression: A meta-analytic review. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology. 2010;78(2):169-183.
  10. Hill CL, Updegraff JA. Mindfulness and its relationship to emotional regulation. Emotion. 2012;12(1):81-90.
  11. Keng S, Smoski MJ, Robins CJ. Effects of mindfulness on psychological health: A review of empirical studies. Clinical Psychology Review. 2011;31:1041-1056.
  12. Laurent HK, Laurent SM, Nelson B, Wright DB, De Araujo Sanchez M. Dispositional mindfulness moderates the effect of a brief mindfulness induction on physiological stress responses. Mindfulness. 2014 Dec.
  13. Bränström R, Kvillemo P, Åkerstedt T. Effects of Mindfulness Training on Levels of Cortisol in Cancer Patients. Psychosomatics. 2013;54:158-164.
  14. Raab K. Mindfulness, self-compassion, and empathy among health care professionals: A review of the literature. Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy. 2014;20:95-108.
  15. Trautwein F, Naranjo JR, Schmidt S, Walach H. Meditation: Neuroscientific approaches and philosophical implications. Cham, Switzerland: Springer International Publishing; 2014. Chapter 10, Meditation effects in the social domain: Self-other connectedness as a general mechanism?; p.175-198.
  16. Gilbert D, Waltz J. Mindfulness and health behaviours. Mindfulness. 2010;1:227-234.
  17. Vidrine JI, Businelle MS, Cinciripini P, Li Y, Marcus MT, Waters AJ, Reitzel LR, Wetter DW. Associations of mindfulness with nicotine dependence, withdrawal, and agency. Substance Abuse. 2009;30:318-327.
  18. Brewer JA, Mallik S, Babuscio TA, Nich C, Johnson HE, Deleone CM, Minnix-Cotton CA, Byrne SA, Kober H, Weinstein AJ, Carroll KM, Rounsaville BJ. Mindfulness training for smoking cessation: Results from a randomized controlled trial. Drug and Alcohol Dependence. 2011;119:72-80.
  19. Karyadi KA, Cyders MA. Elucidating the association between trait mindfulness and alcohol use behaviours among college students. Mindfulness. 2015 Jan.
  20. Hölzel BK, Lazar SW, Gard T, Schuman-Olivier Z, Vago DR, Ott U. How does mindfulness meditation work? Proposing mechanisms of action from a conceptual and neural perspective. Perspectives on Psychological Science. 2011;6(6):537-559.
  21. Carlson LE, Speca M, Faris P, Patel KD. One year pre–post intervention follow-up of psychological, immune, endocrine and blood pressure outcomes of mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) in breast and prostate cancer outpatients. Brain, Behaviour, and Immunity. 2007;21:1038-1049.
  22. Witek-Janusek L, Albuquerque K, Chroniak KR, Chroniak C, Durazo-Arvizu R, Mathews HL. Effects of mindfulness-based stress reduction on immune function, quality of life and coping in women newly diagnosed with early stage breast cancer. Brain, Behaviour, and Immunity. 2008;22:969-981.
  23. Davidson RJ, Kabat-Zinn J, Schumacher J, Rosenkranz M, Muller D, Santorelli SK, Urbanowski F, Harrington A, Bonus K, Sheridan JF. Alterations in brain and immune function produced by mindfulness meditation. Psychosomatic Medicine. 2003;65:564-570.
  24. Krasner M. Mindfulness-based interventions: A coming of age? Families, Systems, & Health. 2004;22(2):207-212.
  25. Brewer JA, Elwafi HM, Davis JH. Craving to quit: Psychological models and neurobiological mechanisms of mindfulness training as treatment for addictions. Psychology of Addictive Behaviours. 2013;27(2):366-379.
  26. Crane RS, Kuyken W, Hastings RP, Rothwell N, Williams JM. Training teachers to deliver mindfulness-based interventions: Learning from the UK experience. Mindfulness. 2010;1:74-86.
  27. Bihari JL, Mullan EJ. Relating mindfully: A qualitative exploration of changes in relationships through mindfulness-based cognitive therapy. Mindfulness. 2014;5:46-59.
  28. Sipe WE, Eisendrath SJ. Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy: Theory and practice. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry. 2012;57(2):63-69.
  29. Green SM, Bieling PJ. Expanding the scope of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy: Evidence for effectiveness in a heterogeneous psychiatric sample. Cognitive and Behavioural Practice. 2011;10:174-180.
  30. O’Connell B, Dowling M. Dialectical behaviour therapy (DBT) in the treatment of borderline personality disorder. Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing. 2014;21:518-525.
  31. Swart J, Apsche J. Mindfulness, mode deactivation, and family therapy: A winning combination for treating adolescents with complex trauma and behavioural problems. International Journal of Behavioural Consultation and Therapy. 2014;9(2):9-13.
  32. Penberthy JK, Konig A, Gioia CJ, Rodríguez VM, Starr JA, Meese W, Worthington-Stoneman D, Kersting K, Natanya E. Mindfulness-based relapse prevention: History, mechanisms of action, and effects. Mindfulness. 2013 Aug.
  33. Reibel DK, Greeson JM, Brainard GC, Rosenzweig S. Mindfulness-based stress reduction and health-related quality of life in a heterogeneous patient population. General Hospital Psychiatry. 2001 July;23(4):183.
  34. Larouche E, Hudon C, Goulet S. Potential benefits of mindfulness-based interventions in mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer’s disease: An interdisciplinary perspective. Behavioural Brain Research. 2015;276:199-212.
  35. Kabat-Zinn J, Wheeler E, Light T, Skillings A, Scharf MJ, Cropley TG, Hosmer D, Bernhard JD. Influence of a mindfulness meditation-based stress reduction intervention on rates of skin clearing in patients with moderate to severe psoriasis undergoing phototherapy (UVB) and photochemotherapy (PUVA). Psychosomatic Medicine. 1998;60:625-632.
  36. Shanafelt TD. Enhancing meaning in work: A prescription for preventing physician burnout and promoting patient-centered care. JAMA. 2009;302(12):1338-1340.
  37. Geller R, Krasner M, Korones D. Clinician self-care: The applications of mindfulness-based approaches in preventing professional burnout and compassion fatigue. Journal of Pain and Symptom Management. 2010;39(2):366.
  38. Wallace JE, Lemaire JB, Ghali WA. Physician wellness: a missing quality indicator. The Lancet. 2009;374(9702):1714-1721.
  39. McCray LW, Cronholm PF, Bogner HR, Gallo JJ, Neill RA. Resident physician burnout: is there hope? Family Medicine. 2008;40(9):626-632.
  40. Fortney L, Luchterhand C, Zakletskaia L, Agierska A, Rakel D. Abbreviated mindfulness intervention for job satisfaction, quality of life, and compassion in primary care clinicians: A pilot study. Annals of Family Medicine. 2013;11(5)412-420.
  41. Goodman MJ, Schorling JB. A mindfulness course decreases burnout and improves well-being among healthcare providers. International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine. 2013;43(2):119-128.
  42. Beach CM, Roter D, Korthuis PT, Epstein RM, Sharp V, Ratanawongsa N, Cohn J, Eggly S, Sankar A, Moore RD, Saha S. A multicenter study of physician mindfulness and health care quality. Annals of Family Medicine. 2013;11(5)421-428.
  43. Krasner MS, Epstein RM, Beckman H, Suchman AL, Chapman B, Mooney CJ, Quill TE. Association of an educational program in mindful communication with burnout, empathy, and attitudes among primary care physicians. JAMA. 2009;302(12):1284-1293.
  44. Regehr C, Glancy D, Pitts A, LeBlanc VR. Interventions to reduce the consequences of stress in physicians: A review and meta-analysis. The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease. 2014;202(5):353-359.
  45. Epstein RM. Mindful practice. JAMA. 1999;282(9):833-839.
  46. Dobkin PL, Irving JA, Amar S. For whom may participation in a mindfulness-based stress reduction program be contraindicated? Mindfulness. 2012;3:44-50.
  47. Germer CK, Siegel RD, Fulton PR. Mindfulness and psychotherapy. New York, NY: Guilford Press; 2005.
  48. Yorston GA. Mania precipitated by meditation: A case report and literature review. Mental Health, Religion & Culture. 2001;4:209-213.
  49. Siegel DJ. Mindful awareness, mindsight, and neural integration. The Humanistic Psychologist. 2009;37(2):137-158.

Raski MP. Mindfulness: What It Is and How It Is Impacting Healthcare. UBCMJ. 2015: 7.1 (56-59).