| Literature DB >> 29126747 |
Simon B Goldberg1, Raymond P Tucker2, Preston A Greene3, Richard J Davidson4, Bruce E Wampold5, David J Kearney3, Tracy L Simpson6.
Abstract
Despite widespread scientific and popular interest in mindfulness-based interventions, questions regarding the empirical status of these treatments remain. We sought to examine the efficacy of mindfulness-based interventions for clinical populations on disorder-specific symptoms. To address the question of relative efficacy, we coded the strength of the comparison group into five categories: no treatment, minimal treatment, non-specific active control, specific active control, and evidence-based treatment. A total of 142 non-overlapping samples and 12,005 participants were included. At post-treatment, mindfulness-based interventions were superior to no treatment (d=0.55), minimal treatment (d=0.37), non-specific active controls (d=0.35), and specific active controls (d=0.23). Mindfulness conditions did not differ from evidence-based treatments (d=-0.004). At follow-up, mindfulness-based interventions were superior to no treatment conditions (d=0.50), non-specific active controls (d=0.52), and specific active controls (d=0.29). Mindfulness conditions did not differ from minimal treatment conditions (d=0.38) and evidence-based treatments (d=0.09). Effects on specific disorder subgroups showed the most consistent evidence in support of mindfulness for depression, pain conditions, smoking, and addictive disorders. Results support the notion that mindfulness-based interventions hold promise as evidence-based treatments.Entities:
Keywords: Evidence-based treatments; Meditation; Meta-analysis; Mindfulness; Psychiatric disorders; Relative efficacy
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29126747 PMCID: PMC5741505 DOI: 10.1016/j.cpr.2017.10.011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Psychol Rev ISSN: 0272-7358