2019
DOI: 10.1002/ace.20314
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Developing and Implementing Mindfulness Programs in Hospital and Health‐Care Settings

Abstract: This chapter presents the process and operational considerations when developing and implementing mindfulness-based programs for both patients and staff in hospital and health-care settings.The meditation timer chimes, signaling the beginning of 15 minutes of silence. The setting is the small conference room of a very busy 42-bed total joint replacement unit. Five nurses, a unit clerk, and the nurse manager close their eyes, rest their hands lightly on their thighs, and are encouraged to take a few deep breath… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Despite meditation being reported in an American Heart Association scientific statement as a low‐risk adjunct (Levine et al, 2017 ), it is evident that awareness of substantive effectiveness evidence is needed to increase health professionals' support for meditation practices, which is consistent with previous systematic review findings (Goyal et al, 2014 ; Rao et al, 2019 ). These findings are also consistent with previous research that highlighted (1) funding, provider hesitancy to recommend meditation in the context of limited research and lack of familiarity with the meditation modality and facilitators (LeVasseur et al, 2019 ), and (2) the focus on acute presentation, politically initiated restructuring and budgetary constraints (Crane & Kuyken, 2013 ; Gibbons & Thomas, 2021 ).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Despite meditation being reported in an American Heart Association scientific statement as a low‐risk adjunct (Levine et al, 2017 ), it is evident that awareness of substantive effectiveness evidence is needed to increase health professionals' support for meditation practices, which is consistent with previous systematic review findings (Goyal et al, 2014 ; Rao et al, 2019 ). These findings are also consistent with previous research that highlighted (1) funding, provider hesitancy to recommend meditation in the context of limited research and lack of familiarity with the meditation modality and facilitators (LeVasseur et al, 2019 ), and (2) the focus on acute presentation, politically initiated restructuring and budgetary constraints (Crane & Kuyken, 2013 ; Gibbons & Thomas, 2021 ).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Mindfulness is an evidence-based intervention for chronic pain that is attracting increased interest among patients [50]. We decided to use the MORE intervention as a phase-2 treatment because it is a recently developed mindfulness-based intervention that has not been widely integrated into healthcare systems [51] but has been shown in two stage-2 randomized controlled trials to significantly reduce the severity of chronic pain, the degree to which pain interferes with daily life, and the misuse of prescription opioids [52,53]. Using mindfulness as a phase-2 treatment allows comparisons with PT and CBT among phase-1 nonresponders and analysis of the sequencing effects of preceding mindfulness with either PT or CBT.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, thought needs to be given to the success and sustainability of the program. This means the program may be dependent on an expertise that comes with training, and it includes personal practice, flexibility, and teamwork (LeVasseur et al, 2019). A potential model for introducing mindfulness (Figure 2) includes an interprofessional model of care (with everyone knowing the basics about mindfulness), which includes allied health teams, and aims at a training the trainer model (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, n.d.).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%