Medical School Mindfulness  

 

“It has been suggested that inadequate self-care and ineffective coping styles are often established during medical training; they may persist after training and be self-destructive in the long-run. Therefore, introducing students to self-regulation skills along with other self-care approaches during medical school may improve their personal health and professional satisfaction not only during residency but also beyond.”  – William McCann

 

Medical School is challenging both intellectually and psychologically. Stress levels are high and burnout is common. It’s been estimated that 63% of medical students experience negative consequences from stress while symptoms of severe stress was present in 25% of students. The prevalence of stress is higher among females than among males. High stress levels lead to lower performance in medical school and higher levels of physical and mental health problems, especially anxiety and depression. Indeed 50% of medical students report burnout and 11% have considered suicide in the last year.

 

Obviously there is a need to either lower stress levels in medical education or find methods to assist medical students in dealing with the stress. One promising possibility is mindfulness training. It has been shown to reduce stress in students (See http://contemplative-studies.org/wp/index.php/2015/08/10/burnout-burnout-with-mindfulness/), to help with the negative consequences of stress (see http://contemplative-studies.org/wp/index.php/2015/07/17/destress-with-mindfulness/) and to reduce burnout in medical professionals (see http://contemplative-studies.org/wp/index.php/2015/08/10/burnout-burnout-with-mindfulness/). So, it would seem reasonable to suspect that mindfulness would be helpful in assisting medical students cope with the stress of their training.

 

In today’s Research News article “The relationships among self-care, dispositional mindfulness, and psychological distress in medical students”

https://www.facebook.com/ContemplativeStudiesCenter/photos/a.628903887133541.1073741828.627681673922429/1103098249714100/?type=3&theater

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4481049/

Slonim and colleagues demonstrate that the higher the level of mindfulness in medical students the lower their distress levels including levels of depression, anxiety, and stress. They also found that higher levels of self-care, in particular spiritual growth, were associated with lower levels of distress.  Finally, they showed that high levels of mindfulness strengthened the relationship between self-care and lower distress levels.  That is, the higher the mindfulness level the greater the impact of self-care on lowering distress. So, mindfulness not only directly lowers depression, anxiety, and stress in medical students but also magnifies the positive effects of self-care on these symptoms of distress.

 

Mindfulness may assist medical students by increasing present moment awareness. This reduces patterns of automatic, mindless, and judgmental thinking which can mitigate the impact of the situation on the individual. So, the student can attribute how they’re feeling and acting to the situation rather than to some personal failing.

 

Mindfulness is known to increase emotion regulation allowing the student to more accurately interpret what they’re feeling and respond to it appropriately. This also reduces the impact of strong negative emotional responses to thoughts and emotions their levels of depression and anxiety. So, mindful students experience their emotional reactions, recognize their causes, and adjust to them in an adaptive way.

 

Finally, mindfulness has been demonstrated to directly reduce symptoms of stress and the individual’s responses to stress. This occurs both by altering the physical and hormonal responses to stress and by reducing the negative spiral of stress, where the fact of stress induces more stress. This dramatically improves the students’ ability to cope with the stressful demands of medical education, perform at a higher level and make burnout less likely.

 

So, be mindful and be better equipped to deal with stressful educational experiences.

 

CMCS – Center for Mindfulness and Contemplative Studies

Building a Better Adult with Elementary School Mindfulness Training

“Educating the mind without educating the heart is no education at all.”  Aristotle

Childhood is a special time of dynamic learning. It is here that behaviors and attitudes are developed that shape the individual. If we wish to build better adults we need to focus on what is experienced during childhood. It is difficult to affect the family and what is learned at home, but we can affect what is learned in school. So, to build a better adult we need to build a better childhood education.

Childhood education rightly focuses on building knowledge and understanding of academic importance. But there is little effort to develop cognitive, emotional, and social skills. This is unfortunate as these skills are important unto themselves’ and also turn out to be very important in developing academic skills. In addition, it’s been shown that cognitive, emotional, and social skills in childhood predict health, financial stability, and educational attainment into adulthood.

Elementary school is a wonderful time to develop these skills. In today’s Research News article “Enhancing Cognitive and Social–Emotional Development Through a Simple-to-Administer Mindfulness-Based School Program for Elementary School Children: A Randomized Controlled Trial.”

https://www.facebook.com/ContemplativeStudiesCenter/photos/a.628903887133541.1073741828.627681673922429/1064877936869465/?type=1&theater

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4323355/

Schonert-Reichl and colleagues test the effectiveness of a social and emotional learning with mindfulness program in 4th and 5th grade students. The results were remarkable, with the mindfulness training producing improvement in a wide array of academic, social, emotional, cognitive, and physical measures.

Mindfulness training improved executive function, improving the children’s working memory, and cognitive flexibility. In addition they showed improved ability to control their behavior. The heightened inhibitory control led to the better control of their emotions as evidenced by a decrease in aggression. If that was not enough improved executive function and control resulted in the mindfulness trained children performing better in the only academic subject measured, math, achieving higher grades.

The mindfulness trained children showed greater social and emotional maturity with increased levels of empathy, perspective-taking, optimism, emotional control, school self-concept, and mindfulness and significantly lower depressive symptoms. In addition the other children rated the mindfulness trained children as higher in sharing, trustworthiness, helpfulness, taking others’ views, and were liked more, and lower aggressive behavior and were less likely to start a fight.

These results are nothing short of spectacular. A simple, easy to administer program to elementary school children produced major improvements in every aspect of the child’s performance in school, from academic, to social, to emotional. It remains to be seen how lasting these effects are but regardless, even if they only occur in conjunction with mindfulness training they indicate that this kind of training is extraordinarily important in promotion the child’s school performance and well-being.

So train your children in mindfulness and produce a better adult.

“Imagination is more important than knowledge. For knowledge is limited to all we now know and understand, while imagination embraces the entire world, and all there ever will be to know and understand.” – Albert Einstein

CMCS

Building a Better Adult – Preschool Mindfulness Training

What we learn as young children continues to affect us throughout our lives. If we wish to build better adults the place to start is in early childhood education. Here we can mold and build behaviors and attitudes that will shape the individual’s behavior over a lifetime.

Our focus to date in early education has been almost exclusively on building knowledge and performance on standardized tests. We have neglected to specifically work on developing cognitive, emotional, and social skills despite the fact that it has been established that these skills are not only important unto themselves, but are also turn out to be very important in developing academic skills. Research has demonstrated that cognitive, emotional, and social skills in childhood predict health, financial stability, and educational attainment into adulthood.

Childhood is an optimum time to develop these skills. Children are malleable and their nervous systems are particularly plastic and capable of being shaped and molded. In today’s Research News article “Promoting prosocial behavior and self-regulatory skills in preschool children through a mindfulness-based kindness curriculum.”

https://www.facebook.com/ContemplativeStudiesCenter/photos/a.628903887133541.1073741828.627681673922429/1044882172202375/?type=1&theater

Lisa Flook and colleagues test the effectiveness of a mindfulness program in 4 and 5 year old preschool children. They demonstrate that a brief program in mindfulness improves a whole spectrum of cognitive and social behaviors, including social competence, health, social-emotional development, cognitive flexibility and delay of gratification and even improves report card grades. That the effect may be lasting was evidenced by the fact that the improved grades carried over into the semester following the training.

This is quite remarkable that relatively brief mindfulness training with 4 to 5 year olds can produce such far ranging effects. A key element may be that the mindfulness training improves self-regulation. The better performance of the trained children in the delay of gratification task is indicative of improved ability for self-control. Doing well on this task has been shown to predict success in later life. This improved self-regulation may also be the reason for the improved grades.

Another key element of mindfulness training is improvement in attentional ability. Young children have very limited attentional ability and any increase can have far ranging consequences for the child’s behavior. Attention is also a component in self-regulation further strengthening the self-control. It also is important for academic achievement and its enhancement may be a major contributor to the grade improvements.

Mindfulness training also improves mindfulness itself. It improves engagement with what is transpiring in the present. Such focus is important in successful academic and social competence. It has also been shown to produce appreciation for life and increased happiness. These attitudes can infect everything that the child engages in, making them more effective and popular.

Humans are social creatures and skillful social behavior can be a key to not only later success but also happiness. Once again attention and self-regulation are important in social interactions and these may be contributing to the improved social competence in the trained children. But an additional focus of the training was on developing the qualities of kindness and care toward oneself and others. This kind of training has been shown to improve empathy and compassion, which are important skills for social success.

So train your children in mindfulness and produce a better adult.

CMCS