Mindfulness training for medical and psychology students

Medical and clinical psychology students strive to be good professionals. In addition to acquiring academic knowledge and skills, they also need to build affective and inter-personal capacities. Doing so will help them to secure both their own health and well-being, and to improve their ability to h...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Campbell Systematic Reviews
Main Author: de Vibe, Michael
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10852/40933
http://urn.nb.no/URN:NBN:no-45577
Description
Summary:Medical and clinical psychology students strive to be good professionals. In addition to acquiring academic knowledge and skills, they also need to build affective and inter-personal capacities. Doing so will help them to secure both their own health and well-being, and to improve their ability to help the patients they serve. Systematic reviews have shown, however, that a large proportion of such students suffer from mental distress and low quality of life: burnout increases towards the latter part of their studies and persists in their professional careers. Finding ways to promote student well-being and strengthen their coping abilities is therefore of increasing interest and importance. Mindfulness training has been identified as a potentially valuable intervention for students. This thesis explores the evidence base for one method of mindfulness training for students, known as Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR), and analyses the results of a two-centre RCT conducted at the Universities of Oslo and Tromsø, Norway. The first paper is a general review and meta-analysis of the effects of MBSR training programmes for adults. The review shows that MBSR training has a moderate and consistent effect on a number of measures of mental health for a wide range of target groups. The effects observed were similar in clinical and non-clinical populations, including students. The second paper presents the pre- to post-intervention results of an MBSR RCT conducted in Norway, with a sample of 288 medical and psychology students. The trial showed that the intervention had a moderate effect on mental distress, and a small effect on both subjective well-being and the mindfulness facet ‘non-react’, compared to the control group. Only female students showed significant effects; they also reported reduced study stress and an increase in the mindfulness facet ‘non-judge’. The third paper explores the issue of which students benefited most from the MBSR programme. Our analysis shows that the personality factors of neuroticism and conscientiousness interacted with the effects of the MBSR intervention on mental distress, subjective well-being, and study stress. Increased effects were noted among students with higher stress vulnerability. This thesis reports on additional study results related to empathy and coping. An increase in the coping style of problem solving was observed following the training. Together, these results indicate that mindfulness training is a feasible way to decrease levels of mental distress among students and improve their well-being. Mental distress is prevalent in student populations, and we therefore recommend further intervention trials of this kind in higher education settings.