Meditation and mindfulness in clinical practice.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to review various meditation techniques, including mindfulness, and their potential benefits for children, adolescents, and their families.
Results Summary
The study suggests that mindfulness and meditation techniques may help reduce symptomatic anxiety, depression, and pain in youth, though current data is not conclusive. Clinicians are advised to receive proper training before using these techniques.
Population
Children, adolescents, and their families
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
mindfulness-based stress reduction | decrease | symptomatic anxiety | youth | - | suggestive of a possible value for treating | #1 |
mindfulness-based stress reduction | decrease | depression | youth | - | suggestive of a possible value for treating | #2 |
mindfulness-based stress reduction | decrease | pain | youth | - | suggestive of a possible value for treating | #3 |
mindfulness-based cognitive therapy | decrease | symptomatic anxiety | youth | - | suggestive of a possible value for treating | #4 |
mindfulness-based cognitive therapy | decrease | depression | youth | - | suggestive of a possible value for treating | #5 |
mindfulness-based cognitive therapy | decrease | pain | youth | - | suggestive of a possible value for treating | #6 |
yoga meditation | decrease | symptomatic anxiety | youth | - | suggestive of a possible value for treating | #7 |
yoga meditation | decrease | depression | youth | - | suggestive of a possible value for treating | #8 |
yoga meditation | decrease | pain | youth | - | suggestive of a possible value for treating | #9 |
transcendental meditation | decrease | symptomatic anxiety | youth | - | suggestive of a possible value for treating | #10 |
transcendental meditation | decrease | depression | youth | - | suggestive of a possible value for treating | #11 |
transcendental meditation | decrease | pain | youth | - | suggestive of a possible value for treating | #12 |
mind-body techniques (meditation, relaxation) | decrease | symptomatic anxiety | youth | - | suggestive of a possible value for treating | #13 |
mind-body techniques (meditation, relaxation) | decrease | depression | youth | - | suggestive of a possible value for treating | #14 |
mind-body techniques (meditation, relaxation) | decrease | pain | youth | - | suggestive of a possible value for treating | #15 |
body-mind techniques (yoga poses, tai chi movements) | decrease | symptomatic anxiety | youth | - | suggestive of a possible value for treating | #16 |
body-mind techniques (yoga poses, tai chi movements) | decrease | depression | youth | - | suggestive of a possible value for treating | #17 |
body-mind techniques (yoga poses, tai chi movements) | decrease | pain | youth | - | suggestive of a possible value for treating | #18 |
This article describes the various forms of meditation and provides an overview of research using these techniques for children, adolescents, and their families. The most researched techniques in children and adolescents are mindfulness-based stress reduction, mindfulness-based cognitive therapy, yoga meditation, transcendental meditation, mind-body techniques (meditation, relaxation), and body-mind techniques (yoga poses, tai chi movements). Current data are suggestive of a possible value of meditation and mindfulness techniques for treating symptomatic anxiety, depression, and pain in youth. Clinicians must be properly trained before using these techniques.