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What is the evidence for the use of mindfulness-based interventions in cancer care? A review.

Psycho-oncology
July 1, 2011
Christina Shennan et al. (3 authors)
Journal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tReviewSystematic ReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to critically appraise the evidence for the use of mindfulness-based interventions in cancer care.

Results Summary

Studies reported significant improvements in anxiety, depression, stress, sexual difficulties, physiological arousal, and immune function, though methodological limitations and diversity in study designs made comparisons difficult. Mindfulness interventions were deemed promising across the cancer trajectory.

Population

Cancer patients (acute treatment and palliative care settings).

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (7)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
mindfulness-based interventions
decrease
anxiety
cancer care patients
-
significant improvements
#1
mindfulness-based interventions
decrease
depression
cancer care patients
-
significant improvements
#2
mindfulness-based interventions
decrease
stress
cancer care patients
-
significant improvements
#3
mindfulness-based interventions
decrease
sexual difficulties
cancer care patients
-
significant improvements
#4
mindfulness-based interventions
decrease
physiological arousal
cancer care patients
-
significant improvements
#5
mindfulness-based interventions
increase
immune function
cancer care patients
-
significant improvements
#6
mindfulness-based interventions
neutral
-
cancer care patients
-
subjective benefits
#7
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this paper is to present and critically appraise the evidence for the use of mindfulness-based interventions in cancer care. METHODS: Systematic review methods were used. A thorough search of relevant major and specialised electronic databases was made and unpublished and ongoing work was also identified. Both qualitative and quantitative studies were eligible for inclusion. Information about aims, design, participant sample, measures, findings and intervention details were extracted from each study. RESULTS: Thirteen research papers and four conference abstracts published since 2007 were identified which met the criteria, reporting five different types of mindfulness intervention. The 13 papers composed of three randomised control trials, two non-randomised control trials, five pre and post-test designs and two qualitative studies. Studies report significant improvements in anxiety, depression, stress, sexual difficulties, physiological arousal and immune function or subjective benefits across all interventions. Methodological limitations were identified. Diversity in study designs and interventions makes comparisons between studies difficult. Some mindfulness interventions may have a place in acute treatment and palliative care. CONCLUSION: Mindfulness approaches are a promising intervention in cancer care, potentially across the cancer trajectory. Further qualitative research and research into different styles of mindfulness delivery are recommended.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Evidence-Based MedicineHumansMedical OncologyMind-Body TherapiesNeoplasmsQuality of Life
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy75/10
Quality70/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations143
Citations/Year10.2
Relative Citation Ratio5.15
NIH Percentile93.4%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.95
Weight Score1.41
Normalized Score0.64
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