Meditation practices for health: state of the research.

Maria B Ospina, Kenneth Bond, Mohammad Karkhaneh, Lisa Tjosvold, Ben Vandermeer, Yuanyuan Liang, Liza Bialy, Nicola Hooton, Nina Buscemi, Donna M Dryden, Terry P Klassen
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Abstract

Objectives: To review and synthesize the state of research on a variety of meditation practices, including: the specific meditation practices examined; the research designs employed and the conditions and outcomes examined; the efficacy and effectiveness of different meditation practices for the three most studied conditions; the role of effect modifiers on outcomes; and the effects of meditation on physiological and neuropsychological outcomes.

Data sources: Comprehensive searches were conducted in 17 electronic databases of medical and psychological literature up to September 2005. Other sources of potentially relevant studies included hand searches, reference tracking, contact with experts, and gray literature searches.

Review methods: A Delphi method was used to develop a set of parameters to describe meditation practices. Included studies were comparative, on any meditation practice, had more than 10 adult participants, provided quantitative data on health-related outcomes, and published in English. Two independent reviewers assessed study relevance, extracted the data and assessed the methodological quality of the studies.

Results: Five broad categories of meditation practices were identified (Mantra meditation, Mindfulness meditation, Yoga, Tai Chi, and Qi Gong). Characterization of the universal or supplemental components of meditation practices was precluded by the theoretical and terminological heterogeneity among practices. Evidence on the state of research in meditation practices was provided in 813 predominantly poor-quality studies. The three most studied conditions were hypertension, other cardiovascular diseases, and substance abuse. Sixty-five intervention studies examined the therapeutic effect of meditation practices for these conditions. Meta-analyses based on low-quality studies and small numbers of hypertensive participants showed that TM(R), Qi Gong and Zen Buddhist meditation significantly reduced blood pressure. Yoga helped reduce stress. Yoga was no better than Mindfulness-based Stress Reduction at reducing anxiety in patients with cardiovascular diseases. No results from substance abuse studies could be combined. The role of effect modifiers in meditation practices has been neglected in the scientific literature. The physiological and neuropsychological effects of meditation practices have been evaluated in 312 poor-quality studies. Meta-analyses of results from 55 studies indicated that some meditation practices produced significant changes in healthy participants.

Conclusions: Many uncertainties surround the practice of meditation. Scientific research on meditation practices does not appear to have a common theoretical perspective and is characterized by poor methodological quality. Firm conclusions on the effects of meditation practices in healthcare cannot be drawn based on the available evidence. Future research on meditation practices must be more rigorous in the design and execution of studies and in the analysis and reporting of results.

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冥想练习对健康的影响:研究现状。
目的:回顾和综合各种冥想练习的研究现状,包括:研究的具体冥想练习;采用的研究设计、考察的条件和结果;在三种研究最多的情况下,不同的冥想练习的功效和效果;效果修饰词对结果的作用;以及冥想对生理和神经心理结果的影响。数据来源:对截至2005年9月的17个医学和心理学文献电子数据库进行了全面检索。其他可能相关研究的来源包括手工搜索、参考文献追踪、与专家接触和灰色文献搜索。回顾方法:采用德尔菲法开发一套参数来描述冥想练习。纳入的研究是比较的,涉及任何冥想练习,有10名以上的成人参与者,提供与健康有关的结果的定量数据,并以英语发表。两名独立审稿人评估了研究的相关性,提取了数据并评估了研究的方法学质量。结果:确定了五大类冥想练习(咒语冥想,正念冥想,瑜伽,太极和气功)。冥想实践的普遍或补充成分的特征被实践之间的理论和术语异质性所排除。813项主要质量较差的研究提供了关于冥想练习研究现状的证据。研究最多的三种疾病是高血压、其他心血管疾病和药物滥用。65项干预研究检查了冥想练习对这些疾病的治疗效果。基于低质量研究和少数高血压参与者的荟萃分析显示,TM(R)、气功和禅宗冥想可显著降低血压。瑜伽有助于减轻压力。在减少心血管疾病患者的焦虑方面,瑜伽并不比基于正念的减压法更好。没有药物滥用研究的结果可以合并。在科学文献中,冥想练习中的效果调节剂的作用一直被忽视。冥想练习的生理和神经心理影响已经在312项低质量研究中进行了评估。对55项研究结果的荟萃分析表明,一些冥想练习对健康参与者产生了显著的变化。结论:围绕冥想练习有许多不确定因素。关于冥想练习的科学研究似乎没有一个共同的理论视角,其特点是方法论质量差。根据现有的证据,无法得出关于冥想练习对医疗保健的影响的确切结论。未来关于冥想练习的研究必须在研究的设计和执行以及结果的分析和报告方面更加严格。
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