| Literature DB >> 32577063 |
Ansha Patel1, P S V N Sharma1, Pratap Kumar2.
Abstract
Living mindfully helps one gain a deeper understanding into realities of life. It enables people to witness suffering, desire, attachments, and impermanence without any fear, anxiety, anger, or despair. This is considered the hallmark of true psychological insight. As a skill, mindfulness can be inculcated by anyone. Mindfulness helps in attending, getting aware and understanding experiences in a compassion and open-minded way. Research suggests that applying mindfulness in daily life has been known to tame our emotional mind and enabled people to perceive things "as they are" without ascribing expectations, judgments, cynicism, or apprehensions to them. This review unravels the therapeutic power of mindfulness meditation in the context of infertility distress. It serves to integrate the evidence on the effectiveness of mindfulness-based psychological interventions to improve the emotional well-being and biological outcomes in Infertility. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: Counseling; India; emotional distress; infertility; mindfulness; psychotherapy; review
Year: 2020 PMID: 32577063 PMCID: PMC7295259 DOI: 10.4103/jhrs.JHRS_51_19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hum Reprod Sci ISSN: 1998-4766
Figure 1PRISMA for the study
Analysis of Studies on MBIs in infertility
| Author & year | Study Design | Characteristics of Participant | Dose, Nature & Core Content of Psychotherapy | Key Outcomes | Drawbacks | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Statistically significant improvement in psychological outcomes | Statistically or clinically significant change in Biological outcomes | |||||
| Domar, 1990 | Pre-post design, NRCT | 54 infertile women, their husbands (who were invited for 2 sessions) Some patients in the group were receiving Treatment (IUI or GIFT); others were no longer in ongoing treatment. | Nature & Dose :: 10 weekly group based sessions (2 hours duration per session), Program is an Eclectic blend of CBT and mindfulness named as the ‘Mind and Body Program for infertility’. Program was led by a trained Psychologist. | Women : | 34% ↑ in conception rates over a follow up of 6 months. Spontaneous decreases in situational Anxiety related to pregnancy and increases in it related to non-pregnancy. | Uncontrolled preliminary investigation, conducted on a selective sample of infertile women willing to undergo therapy, low power and limited generalizability of results |
| Content & Skills: Introduction to the physiology of stress, the relaxation response, and the relationship between stress and reproductive system, diaphragmatic breathing and mini-relaxation-response exercises, life style modification, cognitive restructuring and affirmations, developing self-empathy and compassion, half-day session, mindfulness practises and attitudes, handling the emotions, anger and forgiveness, all day retreat and review . Peer mentoring: In some sessions peer counsellors (who were diagnosed with infertility and were successful graduates of the course in past) were invited to share their experiences, educate and motivate others with their accomplishments and personal stories. | ||||||
| Sheratt and Lunn, 2013 | Pre-post intervention design, NRCT | 13 women with fertility problems ranging 1 - 4 years . In terms of concurrent treatments, one woman was also undertaking cognitivebehavioural therapy, two women were engaged in IVF and three women were seeing an acupuncturist. | Nature & Dose : : 8 weekly sessions of MBCT (group based) (2 hours duration per session), Program was led by a trained Psychologist. Audio visual materials provided for home practise. | Women | Not assessed | Uncontrolled study with limited sample, low power, non-generalizability of results, follow-up data is incomplete and there is an inappropriateconsideration of concurrent therapies taken by clients. |
| Content & Skills: The first half of the program was developed to train participants to learn to bring themselves back to present moment awareness over and over again and living a daily life with mindful qualities. | ||||||
| Psaros, 2014 | Pre-post intervention design, NRCT | 51 Women with any diagnosis of infertility participated. | Nature & Dose : The MBI was a eclectic module, involved a 10-week group program conducted by a trained nurse practitioner . Each session was of 2 hours long. Audio visual materials provided for home practise. | Women | No change detected in Cortisol and AMH as biomarkers from pre-post MBI. | Uncontrolled study, restricted sample, low power, non-generalizability of results, baseline stress being moderate or low in clients which provides a poor rationale for offering them therapy. |
| Content : The program was multidimensional and included daily elicitation of the Relaxation Response using a variety of methods (including breath focus, single-pointed focus, imagery, contemplation, yoga and mindful awareness), the promotion of adaptive cognitive coping and cognitions (e.g. optimism and acceptance), and an assessment of health enhancing behaviours (e.g. individualized recommendations for pre-conception nutrition, exercise and restorative sleep). The weekend session involved husband’s participation to foster a shared experience of the mind-body skills including elicitation of the RR through meditation, partner yoga, mindful walking, humor, social support (for the individual and couple) and education. | ||||||
| Galhardo | NRCT | 92 women diagnosed with primary infertility | Nature & Dose :The intervention was developed and named as Mindfulness Based Program for Infertility (MBPI) and consisted of 10 weekly sessions, 2 hours each with the sixth session being a full day retreat, administered by a trained Psychologist. | Women | Not assessed | Uncontrolled trial, low generalizability of results, Recruitment bias, Participants in both groups were at different stages of their medical treatment and this could have added to a number of confounders. |
| Galhardo | NRCT | 92 women diagnosed with primary infertility | Dose & Content: The dose and content were same as the MBPI (as explained above) and consisted of 10 weekly sessions, 2 hours each with the sixth session being a full day retreat, administered by a trained Psychologist. Audio visual materials provided for home practise. | Women | Not assessed | Uncontrolled trial, Participants were allocated to the MBPI condition and to the control group based on geographical criteria, Participants’ recruitment was conducted via the Internet, study conducted on people who were highly motivated for MBI. |
| Li | NRCT | 58 completed the intervention, and 50 were assigned to a control group. All infertile women registered for their first IVF treatment, did not have mental disorder diagnosis or take psychological treatment in past. | Nature & Dose :The treatment was developed and named as the Mindfulness-Based Intervention for IVF women(-MBII), tailored to match the population . This MBII consists of a six week course, conducted in groups, with one session of 2-2.5 hours duration per week. It was conducted by trained Psychologists. Audio visual materials provided for home practise. | Women | The pregnancy rate was 44% and 26% in the Experimental group and the control group, respectively. | Uncontrolled study, low generalizability of results, lack of a follow uptime point, use of self-report tools, study did not examine the effect of this MBII on physiologic parameters, , single clinic based study. |
| Nery 2018 | RCT | 62 women from the MBP group and 37 from the control group | The MBP intervention was administered to small groups who met for 2 hours weekly during 10 consecutive weeks. The intervention comprised one introductory meeting, eight MBP sessions, and one concluding meeting. The sessions included meditation, relaxation, autogenic training, guided imagery, and biofeedback etc., The control group attended the first and the last meetings but did not attend the MBP sessions. The time interval between allocation and the first group meeting ranged from 1 to 2 weeks. | Women in MBP group vs controls | - | Performance bias, lack of blinding, attrition bias is high, participants that perceived a greater benefit of the MBP were more likely to remain in the program leading to overestimation of the benefits of the intervention. |
| Fard, 2018 | RCT | 30 women in MBI and 30 controls undergoing ART | Nature and Dose: The experimental group received MBI in eight group sessions (120 min each) over 8 weeks. The first mindfulness module focused on the basic requirements for mindfulness practice with several basic exercises, such as breathing exercises and a body scan. The second module expanded the first module and consisted of paying attention to develop the ability to flexibly and intentionally switch from one aspect of infertility stress (the need for parenthood) to another (social concerns). The third mindfulness module emphasized the acceptance of unchangeable events (a child-free lifestyle). The participants learned to deal with failures of the ART procedure and living without childbirth. The fourth mindfulness module focused on the realization and nonjudgmental comprehension of the momentum of thoughts, especially about social concerns, marital concerns, and relationship concerns. In the fifth mindfulness module, the participants learned to detach themselves from unwanted thoughts about the fivedomains of infertility stress (the need for parenthood, rejection of a child-free lifestyle, social concerns, marital relationship problems, and sexual concerns) by focusing on the present moment with a nonjudgmental attitude. | Women in MBI group vs controls | - | Small sample size, use of self report measures, recruitment bias, lack of assessment clinical outcomes, lack of blinding, no follow up conducted, lack of assessment of compliance of skills. |
| Patel, | RCT | 36 infertile couples in MBI group and 41 Parallel Controls. All participants were undergoing IUI. | Nature& Dose: The treatment was developed and named as the Modified Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy, and tailored to match the local population and problem being addressed. The intervention consists of one pre-session and 6 sessions of daily therapy with 1.5 hours per session, delivered to the couple. Program is conducted by a Reg. Clinical Psychologist trained in MBIs, infertility and reproductive psychology. Written handouts of sessions, Audio recording of skills done on the patient’s smart phones. | Results Awaited | Results Awaited | Awaited |
Footnote: NRCT: Nonrandomized Control Trial, RCT: Randomized Control Trial, POMS: Profile of moods states, STAI: State Trait Anxiety Inventory, IUI: intra-uterine insemination with the use of one’s own gametes, IVF: In vitro fertilization with the use of one’s own gametes, GIFT: Gamete intra fallopian transfer, MBCT: Mindfulness based Cognitive therapy, MBI: Mindfulness based intervention, CORE-OM: Clinical outcomes in routine evaluation questionnaire, WHO: World Health Organization, AMH: anti-Mullerian Hormone, MBPI: Mindfulness Based Program for Infertility, BDI : Becks Depression Inventory, OAS: Others as shame scale, ESS: Experience of Shame Scale, ES: Entrapment Scale, DS: Defeat Scale, AAQ: Acceptance and Action Questionnaire, SCSC: Self-Compassion Scale-compassion component, SCSJ: Self-Compassion Scale- self judgment component, ISE: Infertility self efficacy scale, MBII: Mindfulness-Based Intervention for IVF women, FertiQol: Fertility related quality of life questionnaire, DERS: Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale, , Ch-FFMQ: The Chinese version of Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire, COMPI: The Copenhagen Multi-Centre Psychosocial Infertility, PGWBI: Psychological General Well Being Inventory. * Most of literature on psychological interventions in infertility carries a high risk of bias31. This bias is evident on several domains (sample selection, detection, procedural, assessment and attrition, as well as the evaluation of outcomes and reporting of results). Thus discussion of results in this chapter would largely be carried out in light of evidences gathered from RCTs and NRCTs (with a low risk of bias) that adhere to principles of evidenced based practise and therapy31. This review excludes case studies, case series and non-specific interventions (such as expressive writing interventions, self-help interventions, internet therapy and music therapy) and studies in which MBIs were delivered by untrained mental health practitioners