Liu Kevin, Madrigal Esmeralda, Chung Joyce S, Parekh Mira, Kalahar Colin S, Nguyen Donald, Timmerman Molly, Harris Odette A
Altern Ther Health Med. 2023 Sep;29(6):42-49.
Studies have found evidence for meditation's positive effects on health and well-being, but the difficulty of learning and engaging in meditation practice has been identified as a major barrier. Virtual reality (VR) technology may facilitate meditation practice by immersing users in a distraction-free and calming virtual environment, although this theory has yet to be rigorously tested.
This study intended to examine the efficacy of VR-guided meditation in a population of US veterans as a tool to facilitate meditation and relaxation practice for reduction of stress and chronic pain as well as to elicit participants' feedback regarding their perceptions of VR-guided meditation.
The research team designed a preliminary study to identify the scope of future investigations.
The study was conducted at an outpatient polytrauma clinic in a Veterans Affairs (VA) Palo Alto Health Care System, located in Palo Alto, California.
Participants were a convenience sample of 31 veterans, with an average age of 55.2 years, who were patients at the polytrauma clinic and who had conditions with varying levels of stress and chronic pain.
All participants completed a 10-minute, VR-guided-meditation session based on the Zen form of meditation.
At baseline immediately before and postintervention immediately after the VR meditation session, self-report ratings of pain and stress, physiological measures testing heart rate (HR) and blood pressure (BP), and participants' survey responses that assessed their experiences with, attitudes toward, and concerns about VR for clinical therapy were obtained.
Participants showed statistically significant reductions in self-reported pain and stress, HR, and systolic and diastolic BP. Participants reported high satisfaction with VR-guided meditation, and few reported negative side-effects.
The study provided evidence for the usefulness of VR technology as a facilitator of meditation practice for reduction of stress and chronic pain. Future studies are needed to examine the long-term effects of repeated VR-guided-meditation sessions for patients with stress and chronic pain.
研究已发现冥想对健康和幸福有积极影响的证据,但学习和参与冥想练习的困难被认为是一个主要障碍。虚拟现实(VR)技术可能通过将用户沉浸在无干扰且平静的虚拟环境中来促进冥想练习,尽管这一理论尚未经过严格测试。
本研究旨在检验VR引导冥想对美国退伍军人的功效,作为一种促进冥想和放松练习以减轻压力和慢性疼痛的工具,并获取参与者对VR引导冥想的看法的反馈。
研究团队设计了一项初步研究以确定未来调查的范围。
该研究在位于加利福尼亚州帕洛阿尔托的退伍军人事务部(VA)帕洛阿尔托医疗保健系统的门诊多创伤诊所进行。
参与者是31名退伍军人的便利样本,平均年龄为55.2岁,他们是多创伤诊所的患者,患有不同程度的压力和慢性疼痛。
所有参与者都完成了基于禅宗冥想形式的10分钟VR引导冥想课程。
在VR冥想课程前立即进行的基线以及课程后立即进行的干预后,获取疼痛和压力的自我报告评分、测试心率(HR)和血压(BP)的生理指标,以及参与者评估他们在临床治疗中对VR的体验、态度和担忧的调查回复。
参与者在自我报告的疼痛、压力、心率以及收缩压和舒张压方面显示出统计学上的显著降低。参与者对VR引导冥想表示高度满意,很少有人报告有负面副作用。
该研究为VR技术作为促进冥想练习以减轻压力和慢性疼痛的有用工具提供了证据。未来需要进行研究以检验重复进行VR引导冥想课程对患有压力和慢性疼痛患者的长期影响。