Baer Ruth, Crane Catherine, Montero-Marin Jesus, Phillips Alice, Taylor Laura, Tickell Alice, Kuyken Willem
Department of Psychiatry, Warneford Hospital, University of Oxford, Oxford, OX3 7JX UK.
Mindfulness (N Y). 2021;12(3):763-774. doi: 10.1007/s12671-020-01547-8. Epub 2020 Dec 2.
Evidence-based mindfulness programs have well-established benefits, but the potential for harmful effects is understudied. We explored the frequency and severity of unpleasant experiences and harm in two nonclinical samples participating in an adaptation of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) for the general population.
Study 1 included 84 schoolteachers; study 2 included 74 university students. Both studies were uncontrolled. Participants completed self-report questionnaires about psychological symptoms before and after the 8-week mindfulness course. After the course, they responded to a survey designed for this study that included Likert ratings and free-text questions about unpleasant experiences and harm. All data were collected online.
In both samples, about two-thirds of participants reported unpleasant experiences associated with mindfulness practice during the course. Most participants (85-92%) rated these experiences as not at all or somewhat upsetting; some indicated that difficult experiences led to important learning or were beneficial in some way. The proportion of participants reporting harm from the mindfulness course ranged from 3 to 7%. The proportion showing reliable deterioration on symptom questionnaires ranged from 2 to 7%. Those reporting harm and those showing reliable deterioration on questionnaires were largely separate subgroups; only one participant fell in both.
Findings highlight the need for mindfulness teachers to manage expectations about benefits and difficulties that may occur in mindfulness-based programs and to work skilfully with participants experiencing difficulties. Experiences of harm may not be captured by symptom questionnaires and should be explicitly assessed in other ways.
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s12671-020-01547-8.
基于证据的正念训练项目有着公认的益处,但对其潜在有害影响的研究却不足。我们在参与针对普通人群改编的基于正念的认知疗法(MBCT)的两个非临床样本中,探究了不愉快经历及伤害的频率和严重程度。
研究1纳入了84名学校教师;研究2纳入了74名大学生。两项研究均无对照。参与者在为期8周的正念课程前后完成了关于心理症状的自我报告问卷。课程结束后,他们对为本研究设计的一项调查做出回应,该调查包括李克特量表评分以及关于不愉快经历和伤害的自由文本问题。所有数据均通过在线方式收集。
在两个样本中,约三分之二的参与者报告在课程期间有与正念练习相关的不愉快经历。大多数参与者(85%-92%)将这些经历评为完全不令人苦恼或有些苦恼;一些人表示困难经历带来了重要的学习或在某种程度上是有益的。报告正念课程造成伤害的参与者比例在3%至7%之间。在症状问卷上显示有可靠恶化的比例在2%至7%之间。报告受到伤害的参与者和在问卷上显示有可靠恶化的参与者在很大程度上是不同的亚组;只有一名参与者同时属于这两个亚组。
研究结果凸显了正念教师有必要管理好对基于正念的项目中可能出现的益处和困难的预期,并熟练地帮助有困难的参与者。症状问卷可能无法捕捉到伤害经历,应以其他方式进行明确评估。
在线版本包含可在10.1007/s12671-020-01547-8获取的补充材料。