Evaluation of a Brief Mindfulness Program for People with Multiple Sclerosis Delivered in the Community Over Five Years

被引:4
|
作者
Campbell, Maddison [1 ]
Pakenham, Kenneth I. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Queensland, Sch Psychol, Brisbane, Qld 4072, Australia
关键词
Acceptance; Mindfulness; Quality of life; Self-compassion; Stress; Distress; QUALITY-OF-LIFE; STRESS REDUCTION; SELF-COMPASSION; PSYCHOLOGICAL INFLEXIBILITY; PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES; INTERVENTION; DEPRESSION; QUESTIONNAIRE; ASSOCIATION; IMPUTATION;
D O I
10.1007/s11482-021-09944-4
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
This study evaluated the effectiveness, change mechanisms, and sustainability of a brief mindfulness intervention for people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS) delivered in the community through a frontline service over five years. Participants were 126 PwMS. A single intervention condition design was used with pre-intervention, post-intervention and 2-month follow-up assessments. The primary outcome was distress. Secondary outcomes were perceived stress, quality of life (QoL) and fatigue, and the proposed change mechanisms: mindfulness, self-compassion, psychological inflexibility. Intention-to-treat analyses showed the primary outcome, distress (Cohen's d = .25), and all secondary outcomes improved: perceived stress (d = .38), mental health QoL (d = .39), physical health QoL (d = .47), fatigue (d = .30), mindfulness (d = .29), self-compassion (d = .37), psychological flexibility (d = .44). Distress, stress and perceived stress continued to improve post-intervention to follow-up. Mindfulness emerged as a temporal mediator of perceived stress (BCa 95% CI). Self-compassion mediated concurrent improvements in distress, perceived stress, fatigue and physical health QoL, while greater psychological flexibility mediated concurrent reductions in distress (BCa 95% CI). Mindfulness home practice was unrelated to improvements on all outcomes except a marginal association with mindfulness. Of the socio-demographic and illness factors, lower disease severity predicted improvements in physical health QoL (p = .046). Improvements in outcomes were supported by qualitative feedback and participant satisfaction ratings. Twenty-one groups were offered with good participant engagement and wide geographical reach, suggesting sustained feasibility of the Mindfulness for MS program over five years. Findings support the delivery of the Mindfulness for MS program through a community-based service in partnership with a local university.
引用
收藏
页码:1019 / 1041
页数:23
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Evaluation of a Brief Mindfulness Program for People with Multiple Sclerosis Delivered in the Community Over Five Years
    Maddison Campbell
    Kenneth I. Pakenham
    [J]. Applied Research in Quality of Life, 2022, 17 : 1019 - 1041
  • [2] The Evaluation of an Online Mindfulness Program for People with Multiple Sclerosis
    Sesel, A. L.
    Sharpe, L.
    Beadnall, H. N.
    Barnett, M. H.
    Szabo, M.
    Naismith, S. L.
    [J]. MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS JOURNAL, 2020, 26 (03) : NP14 - NP15
  • [3] Evaluation of a brief community-based mindfulness intervention for people with multiple sclerosis: A pilot study
    Spitzer, Elizabeth
    Pakenham, Kenneth I.
    [J]. CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGIST, 2018, 22 (02) : 182 - 191
  • [4] The evaluation of an online mindfulness program for people with multiple sclerosis: study protocol
    Sesel, Amy-Lee
    Sharpe, Louise
    Beadnall, Heidi N.
    Barnett, Michael H.
    Szabo, Marianna
    Naismith, Sharon L.
    [J]. BMC NEUROLOGY, 2019, 19 (1)
  • [5] The evaluation of an online mindfulness program for people with multiple sclerosis: study protocol
    Amy-Lee Sesel
    Louise Sharpe
    Heidi N. Beadnall
    Michael H. Barnett
    Marianna Szabo
    Sharon L. Naismith
    [J]. BMC Neurology, 19
  • [6] Randomized trial of a teleconference-delivered fatigue management program for people with multiple sclerosis
    Finlayson, Marcia
    Preissner, Katharine
    Cho, Chi
    Plow, Matthew
    [J]. MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS JOURNAL, 2011, 17 (09) : 1130 - 1140
  • [7] Pilot Evaluation of a Resilience Training Program for People With Multiple Sclerosis
    Pakenham, Kenneth I.
    Mawdsley, Matthew
    Brown, Felicity L.
    Burton, Nicola W.
    [J]. REHABILITATION PSYCHOLOGY, 2018, 63 (01) : 29 - 42
  • [8] MINDFULNESS INTERVENTION FOR PEOPLE WITH MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS: MIMS TRIAL
    Bogosian, A.
    Moss-Morris, Rona
    Chadwick, Paul
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE, 2014, 21 : S167 - S167
  • [9] Feasibility of a targeted strengthening program to improve gait in people with multiple sclerosis: a brief report
    Manago, Mark M.
    Hebert, Jeffrey R.
    Kittelson, John
    Schenkman, Margaret
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF REHABILITATION RESEARCH, 2018, 41 (04) : 364 - 367
  • [10] Mindfulness-based interventions for people with multiple sclerosis
    Simpson, Robert
    Mair, Frances
    Mercer, Stewart
    [J]. MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS JOURNAL, 2015, 21 (09) : 1093 - 1094