Your mental health needs mindfulness Meditation!

Written and medically reviewed for PsychCentral in June 2021, the article “10 Areas that Mindfulness & Meditation Make Us Better” is yet another great list of benefits.  I’ll give you the quick list here – please read the original article at  PsychCentral

1. Enhance your sleep
2. Manage your weight
3. Lower your stress levels
4. Decrease loneliness in seniors
5. Ease negative emotional states when in motion
6. Increase your attention span
7. Manage Chronic Conditions
8. Help prevent depression relapse
9. Reduce Anxiety
10. Decrease cognitive decline

6 health benefits of meditation

A reference based article that includes a number of studies go over 6 health benefits of meditation. Click the image to read the original article. Summary below



1. Lowers High Blood Pressure
2. Slows Cellular Aging
3. Helps Prevent Diabetes
4. Helps Fight Alzheimer’s
5. Reduces Chronic Pain
6. Improves Immune System Function



Huge list of benefits

I’ve decided to continue this site with valuable information as I find it, and possibly an original article or 2.

What better way to start than a huge list of benefits of meditation/mindfulness.  The LiveAndDare site published a list of 76 benefits of meditation. This website researched at least 100 scientific sites and journals to come up with the list.

https://liveanddare.com/benefits-of-meditation/

Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) shown to be equally effect as antidepressants.

photo by digitalart on freedigitalphotos.net

photo by digitalart on freedigitalphotos.net

In a study published in April in The Lancet medical Journal, patients who were given antidepressants to prevent relapse after a major depressive episode were equally as likely to relapse as those who were weaned off the medication and participated in a Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) series of treatments.  MBCT is a form of therapy that was largely influenced by the work of Jon Kabat-Zinn who developed Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) that he introduced in the University of Massachusetts Medical School where he helped develop their Center for Mindfulness.   Similar to MBSR, MBCT is an 8 week program where a 2 hour class is held each week to introduce new concepts and practices.  The bulk of the work is done at home where participants practice guided mindfulness meditation and day to day awareness techniques that develop their mental toolbox.  In the article that summarized the study, comments from a participant give a hint as to how this can be effective.

Mindfulness gives me a set of skills which I use to keep well in the long term,” Nigel Reed, a participant in the study, said in a statement. “Rather than relying on the continuing use of antidepressants, mindfulness puts me in charge, allowing me to take control of my own future, to spot when I am at risk and to make the changes I need to stay well.

Attention and awareness when used correctly can spot mental danger from a distance, giving us more time to use our skills to avoid problems. It is an empowering thing to experience.

Here is the actual study abstract.  Or, if you prefer here is the just-tell-me-what-it-means version.

Work related stress can be helped by meditation

Stress is inevitable, and at times desirable.  Psychologists have distinguished between good stress and bad stress calling the former “Eustress”, and the latter “Distress”.   In their article on the subject, Psycholgists Harry Mills, Ph.D., Natalie Reiss, Ph.D. and Mark Dombeck, Ph.D. define stress as “body’s response to changes that create taxing demands”.

According to a report from the American Institute of Stress, a non-profit dedicated to research and education on the subject, 35 percent of Americans say their jobs are harming their physical or emotional health.

According to a report from the American Institute of Stress, a non-profit dedicated to research and education on the subject, 35 percent of Americans say their jobs are harming their physical or emotional health.

But when stress gets to the point where it is harming your health, it is time to intervene.  Unfortunately, in the United States, more than one out of three of us report that stress from work is hurting us.  “According to a report from the American Institute of Stress, a non-profit dedicated to research and education on the subject, 35 percent of Americans say their jobs are harming their physical or emotional health.”  –cbsnews.com

As the number of workers who report this problem rises, fortunately, the number of companies that are responding is rising as well.  Many Fortune 500 companies like Proctor and Gamble, General Mills, and Google are now offering free mindfulness meditation training in an effort to help their staff with this growing problem.  Mindfulness is fundamentally an attitude of remembering to be in the present moment.  Being pulled away by worry about the future, or guilt about the past are the triggers that cause the stress response.

By cultivating a mindset that returns to the present moment, people can mitigate much of the unnecessary punishment their own minds are causing them.  In this article by CBS news, the authors say mindfulness meditation “melts away” work related stress.  Perhaps by addressing stress first, many of the other illnesses we encounter can be stopped in their tracks before they, too, become another source of stress.  We can trigger an upward spiral of health just by being here, now.

In the UK, The Medical Health Foundation (MHF) calls for mindfulness to be made available from GPs.

UK-Ireland“There is a growing evidence base for a wide range of psychological therapies that can help in the management of stress and mood disorders; including mindfulness-based cognitive therapy.” – Jenny Edwards, MHF Chief Executive

In Johnathan Owens article in The Independent he says that The United Kingdom is recognizing the growing role that issues like stress, anxiety, and depression are having.  These elements are part of the growing mental health crisis that is costing the UK over £100bn per year.  Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy is recommended by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) for staving off depression, but only a handful of clinical commissioning groups make it available in their area, says the MHF.

The call is to make this kind of treatment/training available at the first line of help.  The General Practitioner is functionally equivalent to the primary care physician role we have in the United states.