Adverse Events in Mindfulness-Based Interventions for ADHD

John T. Mitchell, A. Bates, Lidia Zylowska
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

The ADHD Report • 15 Mindfulness-based interventions (MBIs) are part of a broader class of interventions referred to as “third generation” or “third wave” behavior therapies (Hayes, Follette, & Linehan, 2004; Hayes, Luoma, Bond, Masuda, & Lillis, 2006). MBIs are derived from a long-standing Eastern tradition of Vipassana meditation (Hayes et al., 2004), meaning “seeing things as they really are,” and teach mindfulness via formal meditation practice and informal practices. The term mindfulness itself is translated from the Pali word “sati” and has also been translated as “attention,” “awareness,” “retention,” and “discernment” (Davidson & Kaszniak, 2015). One widely used definition of mindfulness is that it involves adopting a nonjudgmental attention to one’s experience(s) in the present moment (Kabat-Zinn, 1990). MBIs have garnered increasing support as efficacious for a variety of mental health disorders (e.g., Kuyken et al., 2016), and in the past 10 years, researchers have extended these efforts to attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). According to one recent meta-analysis (Cairncross & Miller, 2016), there is a medium effect size of MBIs on both inattentiveness and hyperactivity-impulsivity symptoms in ADHD patients. The MBI treatment literature for ADHD is relatively more developed among adult than child and adolescence samples (e.g., there are five separate trials in which an MBI was compared against a control group in adult samples and none in child or adolescent samples). However, diverse treatment effects and methodological limitations still need to be more fully addressed across children, adolescents, and adults with ADHD (e.g., Davis & Mitchell, 2018; Mitchell, Zylowska, & Kollins, 2015; Mukerji Househam & Solanto, 2016). In particular, efforts to understand the positive therapeutic effects of MBIs for ADHD need to be balanced with an understanding of adverse events. As highlighted in this and the previous issue of The ADHD Report, adverse effects of psychosocial interventions are not fully explored in many treatment studies (Berk & Parker, 2009), and this is certainly true in the MBI for ADHD literature. The aim of this article is (a) to initiate a discussion of adverse events that may be applicable to MBI for ADHD treatment studies and (b) to call for incorporation of adverse event monitoring future MBI trials with ADHD samples.
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以正念为基础的ADHD干预的不良事件
15基于正念的干预(mbi)是被称为“第三代”或“第三波”行为疗法的更广泛干预类别的一部分(Hayes, Follette, & Linehan, 2004;Hayes, Luoma, Bond, Masuda, & Lillis, 2006)。mbi源自长期存在的东方内观冥想传统(Hayes et al., 2004),意思是“看到事物的本来面目”,通过正式的冥想练习和非正式的练习来教授正念。“正念”一词本身是从巴利语“sati”翻译过来的,也被翻译为“注意力”、“意识”、“保留”和“洞察力”(Davidson & Kaszniak, 2015)。一个被广泛使用的正念定义是,它包括对当下的经历采取一种不加评判的关注(Kabat-Zinn, 1990)。mbi因对各种心理健康障碍有效而获得越来越多的支持(例如,Kuyken等人,2016),在过去的10年里,研究人员将这些努力扩展到注意力缺陷/多动障碍(ADHD)。根据最近的一项meta分析(Cairncross & Miller, 2016), mbi对ADHD患者的注意力不集中和多动冲动症状都有中等效应。相对而言,MBI治疗ADHD的文献在成人样本中比在儿童和青少年样本中更为发达(例如,有五个独立的试验将成人样本中的MBI与对照组进行了比较,而在儿童或青少年样本中没有比较)。然而,不同的治疗效果和方法局限性仍然需要更充分地解决儿童、青少年和成人多动症患者(例如,Davis & Mitchell, 2018;Mitchell, Zylowska, & Kollins, 2015;Mukerji Househam & Solanto, 2016)。特别是,努力了解MBIs对ADHD的积极治疗效果需要与了解不良事件相平衡。正如本报告和上一期《多动症报告》所强调的那样,许多治疗研究并未充分探讨心理社会干预的不良影响(Berk & Parker, 2009),这在多动症的MBI文献中当然是正确的。本文的目的是(a)开始讨论可能适用于ADHD治疗研究的MBI不良事件,(b)呼吁将不良事件监测纳入未来的ADHD样本MBI试验。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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