Immediate effects of a brief mindfulness-based body scan on patients with chronic pain.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to compare the immediate effects of a 10-minute mindfulness-based body scan versus a control intervention on chronic pain outcomes in a clinical setting and participants' normal environment.
Results Summary
In the clinic setting, the mindfulness body scan significantly reduced pain-related distress and pain interfering with social relations compared to the control group, but no significant differences were found in the normal environment.
Population
Adult outpatients with chronic pain.
Effective Dosage
10-minute audio-recorded mindfulness body scan, delivered twice across 24 hours.
Duration
24 hours (two interventions).
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) | decrease | chronic pain | those with chronic pain | - | has benefits | #1 |
mindfulness-based body scan | decrease | pain related distress | those with chronic pain | - | significant reduction | #2 |
mindfulness-based body scan | decrease | pain interfering with social relations | those with chronic pain | - | significant reduction | #3 |
mindfulness-based body scan | no change | pain severity, pain related distress, perceived ability for daily activities, perceived likelihood of pain interfering with social relations, and mindfulness | those with chronic pain | - | none of the ratings were significantly different | #4 |
brief body scan | decrease | chronic pain | those experiencing chronic pain | - | has immediate benefits | #5 |
Mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) has benefits for those with chronic pain. MBSR typically entails an intensive 8-week intervention. The effects of very brief mindfulness interventions are unknown. Among those with chronic pain, the immediate effects of a 10 min mindfulness-based body scan were compared with a control intervention. Fifty-five adult outpatients were randomly assigned to either: (1) mindfulness-based body scan (n = 27) or (2) a reading about natural history (control group, n = 28), provided via a 10 min audio-recording. Interventions were delivered twice across 24 h; once in the clinic and once in participants' 'normal' environment. Immediately before and after listening to the recording, participants rated pain severity, pain related distress, perceived ability for daily activities, perceived likelihood of pain interfering with social relations, and mindfulness. In the clinic, there was a significant reduction in ratings for pain related distress and for pain interfering with social relations for the body scan group compared with the control group (p = 0.005; p = 0.036, respectively). In the normal environment none of the ratings were significantly different between the groups. These data suggest that, in a clinic setting, a brief body scan has immediate benefits for those experiencing chronic pain. These benefits need to be confirmed in the field.