| Literature DB >> 32252750 |
Sarah Moore1, Rita Barbour2, Hanh Ngo3, Craig Sinclair4, Richard Chambers5, Kirsten Auret6, Craig Hassed7, Denese Playford3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We sought to determine the feasibility and effectiveness of a mindfulness training program, delivered online to medical students at a Rural Clinical School.Entities:
Keywords: Online mindfulness training; Rural medical education; Self-compassion; Stress management
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32252750 PMCID: PMC7137339 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-020-02015-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
MTP outline
| Component | Duration | Delivery method | Frequency | Content |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mini-lecture | 10 min | Emailed hyperlink to audiovisial recording | Weekly (every Monday) | 1. Multi-tasking versus effective task switching |
| 2. Stress reduction and performance | ||||
| 3. Reducing distraction and procrastination | ||||
| 4. Mindful communication | ||||
| 5. Regulating emotions | ||||
| 6. Compassion | ||||
| 7. Self-compassion | ||||
| 8. Mindful use of technology | ||||
| Guided mindfulness meditation session | 5 min | SMS’ed. hyperlink to audio recording | Daily (Monday to Friday) | 1. Body scan |
| 2. Mindful breathing | ||||
| 3. Thought-labelling | ||||
| 4. Mindful listening | ||||
| 5. Working mindfully with emotions | ||||
| 6. Loving-kindness | ||||
| 7. Self-compassion | ||||
| 8. Mountain meditation |
Educational Objectives of Mini-Lectures
| Mini-lecture | Educational Objectives |
|---|---|
| Multi-tasking vs effective task switching | • Understand the negative consequences of multi-tasking, eg mistakes, fatigue, miscommunication |
| • Learn how mindfulness practice promotes a positive alternative to multi-tasking: effective task-switching | |
| Stress reduction and performance | • Understand the negative impact of excess stress on academic and clinical performance |
| • Learn how to moderate stress using mindfulness to improve performance | |
| Reducing distraction and procrastination | • Understand how distraction and procrastination results from lack of mindful awareness |
| • Learn how to reduce these limiting behaviours using mindfulness practice | |
| Mindful communication | • Understand how habitual and reactive communication styles can negatively impact on relationships with colleagues and patients |
| • Learn how to practice mindful communication to optimize these relationships | |
| Regulating emotions | • Understand the nature of emotions and how they impact on our behaviours and interactions with others |
| • Learn how mindfulness practice allows us to notice and regulate our emotions and behaviour | |
| Compassion | • Define compassion and explore why it is important for medical students to practice this skill |
| • Understand how compassion can be developed through mindfulness practice | |
| Self-Compassion | • Define self-compassion and why it is important for medical students to practice this skill |
| • Understand how self-compassion can be developed through mindfulness practice | |
| Mindful use of technology | • Understand how uncontrolled use of technology can negatively impact clinical performance and relationships |
| • Learn mindfulness strategies for using technology efficiently |
Characteristics of participating students at baseline (N = 47)
Fig. 1a Boxplots of weekly prescribed mindfulness meditation practice – Total number of days. b Boxplots of weekly mindfulness meditation practice – Total duration estimated in minutes. Note: As seen in Additional file 2, original data collected on duration of mindfulness practice were in ‘units of time’ not necessarily of equal intervals. To give these ‘time-units’ a more practical meaning, we approximated (or replaced) them with their mid-point values in minutes (i.e., 8 minutes for category 2 (between 5 and 10); 15 minutes for category 3 (10-20 minutes); and 25 minutes for category 4 (20-30 minutes). Category 1 (0-5 minutes) was ascribed with a value of 5 minutes if the participant had indicated that they practiced MM on that particular day, as we inferred that the students would have practiced MM for 5 minutes as per the prescribed exercise, rather than for 3 minutes (i.e., the mid-point value). Category 5 (>30 minutes) was conservatively ascribed with 45-minute duration
Scores on Perceived Stress Scale (PSS), Self Compassion Scale (SCS), and Compassion Scale (CS), before (i.e., at baseline) and after MTP
LL Lower Limit of 95% Confidence Interval. UL Upper Limit of 95% Confidence Interval
* denotes statistically significant effects at alpha = 0.05
Note: In this study’s context, stress (as measured by the PSS) is an undesired construct; as such, a negative score change (i.e., stress reduction) was desired. Conversely, compassion for self and others (as measured by the SCS and CS, respectively) is desired; accordingly, a positive score change (i.e., increase in compassion) is desired
Statistical significance of potential factors contributing to changes in scores on PSS, SCS, and CS, between 4 months post-intervention and baseline
MM Mindfulness meditation
† includes previous training and/or existing practice in mindfulness meditation
‡ total duration over 8-week course (i.e., 56 days) is calculated at a minimum of 5 min × 56 days = 280 min. Models using median total duration (331 min) as cutoff threshold also yielded similar (non-significant) results
LL Lower Limit of 95% Confidence Interval. UL Upper Limit of 95% Confidence Interval
* denotes statistically significant effects (p < 0.05)