| Literature DB >> 30717450 |
Chunxiao Li1,2, Yuxin Zhu3, Mengge Zhang4, Henrik Gustafsson5,6, Tao Chen7.
Abstract
Objective: This review aims to identify, appraise, and synthesize studies reporting the relationship between mindfulness and athlete burnout and the effects of mindfulness-based interventions (MBIs) on athlete burnout.Entities:
Keywords: emotional exhaustion; meditation; research synthesis; sport; stress
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30717450 PMCID: PMC6388258 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16030449
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Study selection process.
Characteristics of the included studies.
| Study # | First Author (Year), Country | Participants | Intervention | Measures | Key findings | Quality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| 1 | Moen (2016), Norway [ | Intervention: (12-week attention training, ≥ 5 times/week, 12 min/session) + (reflection sessions, every third week/ session, 120–150min/session) Control: No treatment | MAAS, ABQ | Significant intervention effects on decreasing burnout levels | Low | |
| 2 | Moen (2015), Norway [ | Intervention: 12-week sitting meditation and body scanning, 3–7 times/week, 10–30 min/session Control: No treatment | MAAS, ABQ | Significant intervention effects on decreasing burnout levels | Low | |
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| 3 | Gustafsson (2015), Sweden [ | NA | MAAS, ABQ | Mindfulness was negatively related to the three burnout dimensions | High | |
| 4 | Zhang (2016), China [ | NA | MAAS, ABQ | Mindfulness was negatively related to the three burnout dimensions | High | |
| 5 | Walker (2013), South Africa [ | NA | FMI, ABQ | Mindfulness was negatively related to global burnout and its three dimensions | High | |
| 6 | Moen (2015), Norway [ | NA | MAAS, ABQ | Mindfulness was negatively related to reduced sense of accomplishment and sport devaluation | Moderate | |
| 7 | Zhang (2017)—Study 5, China [ | NA | AMQ, ABQ | Mindfulness was negatively related to the three burnout dimensions | High | |
| 8 | Amemiya (2019), Japan [ | NA | AMQ, BOSA | Mindfulness was negatively related to global burnout | High | |
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| 9 | Furrer (2015), India [ | Intervention: 12-week sitting meditation and body scanning, 3–7 times/week, 10–30 min/session | Semi-structured interview | Mindfulness training had a positive effect on burnout prevention | Moderate | |
| 10 | Jouper (2013), Sweden [ | Intervention: 20-week active coaching, including (mindfulness schema, 3 separate normal days) + (body scanning, ≥ 2 times/day, 20–40 min/session) + (emotional qigong, ≥ 2 times/day, 20–60 min/session) | ABQ, meeting feedback | Mindfulness and Qigong techniques helped the case to recover from burnout | High | |
MAAS = Mindfulness attention awareness scale; ABQ = Athlete burnout questionnaire; NA = Not applicable; FMI = Freiburg mindfulness inventory; AMQ = Athlete mindfulness questionnaire; BOSA = Burnout scale for university athletes.
Meta-analytic results of the relationship between mindfulness and burnout.
| Variable | Study # |
|
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| 95% CI | Q (df) |
| Fail-Safe |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mindfulness and global burnout | #1, #2, #5, and #8 | 4 | 383 | –0.42 ** | (–0.50, –0.33) | 1.47 (3) | 0.00 | 14 |
| Mindfulness and reduced sense of accomplishment | #1, #2, #3, #4, #5, #6, and #7 | 7 | 1638 | –0.29 ** | (–0.33, –0.24) | 3.57 (6) | 0.00 | 14 |
| Mindfulness and emotional/physical exhaustion | #1, #2, #3, #4, #5, and #7 | 6 | 1256 | –0.33 ** | (–0.42, –0.24) | 13.82 (5) * | 63.82 | 13 |
| Mindfulness and sport devaluation | #1, #2, #3, #4, #5, #6, and #7 | 7 | 1638 | –0.28 ** | (–0.35, –0.21) | 14.35 (6) * | 58.19 | 14 |
** p < 0.01, * p < 0.05; study # is identical to those presented in Table 1; k = Number of independence samples; r = Average-weighted correlation coefficient; CI = Confidence interval.