| Literature DB >> 33228109 |
Abstract
Decades of research suggest that Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) training supports a greater capacity to live with chronic medical conditions and contributes to lowering stress levels. This paper introduces a model for a Mindfulness-Based Recovery from Stroke (MBRfS) for promoting stroke recovery, informed by the lived experience of the author (a stroke survivor and certified MBSR instructor), the research literature regarding MBSR training, and the specific challenges of stroke recovery. Four themes emerged from the autoethnographic analysis that informed the proposed model: Readiness to accept the stroke event and the acquired brain injury, navigating uncertainties of stroke recovery with awareness and self-responsibility for outcomes, trusting the inherent wisdom of the body as a stroke recovery "teacher", and increased capacity to integrate complex emotions with self-compassion, and a sense of wholeness. A four-component MBRfS model is offered, which consists of an integration amongst a modified MBSR framework, emergent attitudinal themes, and insights from the autoethnographic vignettes. The MBRfS model offers a path for providing participants with a supportive experience within stroke recovery. Recommendations and suggestions for future studies are offered to support the development of MBRfS for stroke survivors and their caregivers, as well as contributing to healthcare providers.Entities:
Keywords: medical education; mindfulness; mindfulness-based stress reduction; mindfulness-based stroke recovery; social support for stroke survivors; stroke recovery; stroke rehabilitation
Year: 2020 PMID: 33228109 PMCID: PMC7711731 DOI: 10.3390/healthcare8040498
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Healthcare (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9032
Figure 1Preliminary conceptual model for Mindfulness-Based Recovery from Stroke (MBRfS).
Comparing traditional elements of the MBSR program with the proposed Mindfulness-Based Recovery from Stroke (MBRfS) program (class structure and outline).
| MBSR Classes 1 | Themes and Formal Mindfulness Practices | Home Practice Invitations | Suggested Modifications for MBRfS Classes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Week One: Introductions and Establishing Group | The Seven “Attitudes of Practice”. | Body Scan Meditation. | Introductions and establishing the group. Recognizing that we are all on the same journey, but no two journeys are alike. |
| Week Two: Perception and Stressors | Body Scan Meditation. | Body Scan Meditation. | Balancing compensation techniques with the importance to challenge current deficits in stroke recovery. |
| Week Three: Pleasant and Unpleasant experiences | AOB practice. | Body Scan Meditation. | Short practice sessions, including very short (3 min) breathe awareness practices as “brain breaks”. |
| Week Four: The Stress Cycle and responding to stressful events | Seated Mindfulness Meditation. | Body Scan Meditation | Short practice sessions, including very short (3 min) breath awareness practices as “brain breaks”. |
| Week Five: Moving from stress reactivity to responsivity. | Seated Mindfulness Meditation. | Alternate daily between Body Scan, Seated Meditation, and Yoga/Mindful Movement. | Invite seated mindfulness practice lying down, standing, or sitting, encouraging change of posture as needed by sensing what the body needs and adjusting. Challenge, but not overwhelm. |
| Week Six: Interpersonal mindfulness. | Seated Mindfulness Meditation. | Alternate daily between Body Scan, Seated Meditation, and Yoga/Mindful Movement. | Invite seated mindfulness practice lying down, standing, or sitting, encouraging change of posture as needed. Challenge, but not overwhelm. |
| Day of Mindfulness. | A Day of Silence during the weekend between class six and class seven to practice the formal mindfulness meditations together, including a mindful meal. | Continue homework from Week Six. | Include rest breaks and a dedicated area for participants to rest/sleep as needed through the day. |
| Week Seven: Developing a home practice and continuing interpersonal mindfulness | Seated Mindfulness Meditation. | Practice with no audio guidance this week. | Invite Seated Mindfulness practice lying down, standing, or sitting, encouraging change of posture as needed. Challenge, but not overwhelm. |
| Week Eight: Coming Full Circle | Body Scan Meditation. | Return to home practices in any combination, with and without guided audio recordings. | Combine Body Scan with guided Loving-Kindness practice, emphasizing Loving-Kindness for our bodies. |
| Overarching Practices Across All Weeks (Emphasis on process) | Embodiment of practices and attitudes. | Classes weekly; Expand availability to include two identical sessions each week. This allows opportunity for missed days or the benefits of repetition and social contact. Create a resting space where participants can easily lie down or take additional breaks as needed. |
1 MBSR Curriculum adaptations developed using the 2017 MBSR Authorized Curriculum Guide [51], 2 STOP technique developed by Stahl and Goldstein [52], 3 RAIN technique adapted by Brach [53].
Introduction and expansion with reframing the attitudes of mindfulness in the context of stroke recovery.
| Attitude | Definition of Attitude in Traditional MBSR Context | Suggested Expansion and/or Adaptation of Attitude in MBRfS Context |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Non-judgment | Practice of not being caught up in our ongoing assessments (both internal and external). Noticing ongoing automatic thoughts of judgments and self-criticism. | Noting self-criticism, judgments, or imposing stigma about having a stroke and efforts toward recovery. |
| 2. Patience | Recognizing that everything unfolds in its own time, some processes cannot be expedited. Patience contains its own kind of wisdom. | Patience in the stroke recovery journey and the length of the time it takes to heal the brain and regain lost abilities, also patience with setbacks during the recovery process. |
| 3. Beginner’s Mind | A willingness to see our experience with fresh eyes, a sense of newness rather than the patterns of our opinions, feelings and cognitions. Staying curious. | Using curiosity in assessing gains and not concluding that a recovery plateau has occurred. Staying open minded to see recovery with new eyes every day. |
| 4. Trust | Honoring and staying in tune with our instincts and our own inner compass for guidance. Relying on our basic goodness and wholeness. | Learning to trust the body and especial the brain to heal and guide us, seeing we are “whole” as stroke survivors. |
| 5. Non-Striving | To back off on the intensity to achieve or excessively pushing goal behaviors in hopes of getting desired results. | In stroke recovery, we must learn when and how far to challenge, but not push into overwhelm or regression. |
| 6. Acceptance | A willingness to see things as there presently are, not as we might wish them to be. Coming to terms with a situation rather than forcing or denying. Not to be confused with resignation or giving up. | Acceptance of experiencing stroke is critical to engaging in recovery. We do grieve, but accept what has happened. Acceptance means we engage more fully in recovery efforts sooner, which maximizes recovery potential. |
| 7. Letting Go | Practice of not grasping on to the things we want, while rejecting that which we do not want. Sometimes saying we can “leave it be” is a first step toward letting go. | For stroke survivors, we are challenged over and over, to let go of what our bodies and identities were before the stroke, while still engaging in recovery. |
MBSR Curriculum adaptations developed using the 2017 MBSR Authorized Curriculum Guide [51].
Formal mindfulness practices for home practice routine and recommended MBRfS adaptations.
| Formal Mindfulness Practice | Description in Traditional MBSR Context | Suggested Expansion and/or Adaptation in MBRfS Context |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Body Scan Meditation | Practiced while lying on back and sensing into the body from toes up through the top of the head, including invitations to breathe into each region of the body. Length of practice is approximately 45 min. | With all practices, offer a shorter version as an option to accommodate fatigue and concentration difficulties. |
| 2. Mindful Walking Meditation | Practicing a deliberate walking pace that is slow and generally moves in a circle (if practicing in a group) or walking slowly and pivoting back and forth in a short row, focusing on the sensations in the feet and the movement of walking. Length of practice varies. | Offer a sitting version that allows just the practice of lifting and placing feet in the ground, or standing up in one place, placing each foot up and down. Or, placing the non-affected side but imagining the stroke affected foot moving (if there is paralysis on stroke affected side). With all practices, offer a shorter version as an option to accommodate fatigue and concentration difficulties. |
| 3. Yoga/Mindful Movement Sequences | Gentle stretching sequences of either standing or lying down Yoga postures. The emphasis is to practice very slowly as an exploration of breath and inviting movement into the body. Length of practice is approximately 30–45 min (two sequences offered, either standing or lying down postures). | Offer Chair Yoga versions of the Yoga postures. Invite visualization of all movements, with or without the ability to also move physically. Encourage “beginner’s mind” to challenge but not overwhelm. With all practices, offer a shorter version as an option to accommodate fatigue and concentration difficulties. |
| 4. Seated Mindfulness Meditations | Considered the central formal practice, Seated Mindfulness Meditation is practiced usually on a chair, cushion, or bench, with an upright posture with primary attention on the breath. When the mind is distracted, notice, and return attention gently again to the breath. Formal practice is variable, but the intention is to practice daily for around 45 min (may be combined with other formal practices listed above). | Invite any posture that feels right, and the permission to shift postures as needed. |
| 5. Additional mindfulness meditation practices: Loving Kindness, imagery-based guided meditations (e.g., Lake and Mountain) | Loving-Kindness is a meditative practice from Buddhist traditions which encourages sending good wishes for health, happiness, and well-being, first to oneself and then to others. | Invite any posture that feels right, and the permission to shift postures as needed. |
MBSR Curriculum adaptations developed using the 2017 MBSR Authorized Curriculum Guide.