Scientists still searching for best approaches in
older adults
Newswise, March 9, 2017 – As mindfulness practices rise in
popularity and evidence of their worth continues to accumulate, those who work
with aging populations are looking to use the techniques to boost cognitive,
emotional and physiological health.
But studies so far have shown mixed results in the elderly,
and more investigation is needed to determine exactly how best to apply
mindfulness in that population, a new review of the research to date has found.
A majority of the 27 studies in the review suggest that the
focused attention at the core of mindfulness benefits older people, but others
don’t point to improvements.
And that should prompt more rigorous investigations in search
of interventions likely to do the most good, researchers from The Ohio State
University found. Their analysis appears in the journal Frontiers in
Aging Neuroscience.
“Mindfulness is a practice that really serves as a way to
foster a greater quality of life and there’s been some thought that it could
help with cognitive decline as we age,” said Stephanie Fountain-Zaragoza, lead
author of the study and a graduate student in psychology.
“Given the growing interest in mindfulness in general, we
wanted to determine what we know right now so that researchers can think about
where we go from here,” she said.
The good news so far: The evidence from a variety of studies
points to some benefits for older adults, suggesting that mindfulness training
might be integrated into senior centers and group homes, the researchers found.
Older people are an especially important population to study
given diminished social support, physical limitations and changes in cognitive
health, the researchers point out.
Studies of mindfulness meditation usually involve three types
of practices. The first, focused attention, involves sustained attention to a
single thing (such as the breath) and an effort to disengage from other
distractions.
Open monitoring meditation, often seen as the next step up in
mindfulness, includes acknowledging the details of multiple phenomena
(sensations, sounds, etc.) without selectively focusing on one of them.
“This includes being open to experiencing thoughts and
sensations and emotions and taking them as they come and letting them go,”
Fountain-Zaragoza said.
Loving-kindness meditation encourages a universal state of
love and compassion toward oneself and others.
“The goal with this is to foster compassionate acceptance,”
said senior author Ruchika Shaurya Prakash, director of Ohio State’s clinical
neuroscience laboratory and an expert in mindfulness.
In addition to looking at how mindfulness contributed – or did
not – to behavioral and cognitive functioning and to psychological wellbeing,
some of the research also looked at its potential role in inflammation, which
contributes to a variety of diseases.
In all categories of study, including inflammatory processes,
Prakash and Fountain-Zaragoza found mixed results.
The hope is that mindfulness could help the elderly preserve
attention and capitalize on emotional regulation strategies that naturally
improve as we age, Prakash said.
“Around 50 percent of our lives, our minds are wandering and
research from Harvard University has shown that the more your mind wanders, the
less happy you are,” she said.
“Mindfulness allows you to become aware of that chaotic mind-wandering
and provides a safe space to just breathe.”
In older people, mindfulness ideally has the potential to help
with cognition, emotion and inflammation, but little research has been done so
far and those studies that have been done have had mixed results and scientific
limitations.
While most of the studies in the review showed positive
results, the field is limited and would benefit greatly from larger randomized
controlled trials, Fountain-Zaragoza said.
“We want to really be able to say that we have strong evidence
that mindfulness is driving the changes we see,” she said.
No comments:
Post a Comment