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Meditation awareness training for the treatment of workaholism: A controlled trial.

Journal of behavioral addictions
January 1, 1970
William Van Gordon et al. (6 authors)
Controlled Clinical TrialJournal ArticleHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to investigate the effects of Meditation Awareness Training (MAT), a second-generation mindfulness-based intervention, on workaholism symptoms and related outcomes.

Results Summary

MAT participants showed significant and sustained improvements in workaholism symptoms, job satisfaction, work engagement, and psychological distress, along with reduced work hours without a decline in job performance compared to the control group.

Population

Adults (male and female) suffering from workaholism (n=73).

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Pre-, post-, and 3-month follow-up phases (exact intervention duration not specified).

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (7)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
meditation awareness training (MAT)
decrease
workaholism symptomatology
Male and female adults suffering from workaholism
-
demonstrated significant and sustained improvements
#1
meditation awareness training (MAT)
increase
job satisfaction
Male and female adults suffering from workaholism
-
demonstrated significant and sustained improvements
#2
meditation awareness training (MAT)
increase
work engagement
Male and female adults suffering from workaholism
-
demonstrated significant and sustained improvements
#3
meditation awareness training (MAT)
increase
work duration
Male and female adults suffering from workaholism
-
demonstrated significant and sustained improvements
#4
meditation awareness training (MAT)
decrease
psychological distress
Male and female adults suffering from workaholism
-
demonstrated significant and sustained improvements
#5
meditation awareness training (MAT)
decrease
hours spent working
Male and female adults suffering from workaholism
-
demonstrated a significant reduction
#6
meditation awareness training (MAT)
no change
job performance
Male and female adults suffering from workaholism
-
without a decline
#7
Abstract

Background and aims Workaholism is a form of behavioral addiction that can lead to reduced life and job satisfaction, anxiety, depression, burnout, work-family conflict, and impaired productivity. Given the number of people affected, there is a need for more targeted workaholism treatments. Findings from previous case studies successfully utilizing second-generation mindfulness-based interventions (SG-MBIs) for treating behavioral addiction suggest that SG-MBIs may be suitable for treating workaholism. This study conducted a controlled trial to investigate the effects of an SG-MBI known as meditation awareness training (MAT) on workaholism. Methods Male and female adults suffering from workaholism (n = 73) were allocated to MAT or a waiting-list control group. Assessments were performed at pre-, post-, and 3-month follow-up phases. Results MAT participants demonstrated significant and sustained improvements over control-group participants in workaholism symptomatology, job satisfaction, work engagement, work duration, and psychological distress. Furthermore, compared to the control group, MAT participants demonstrated a significant reduction in hours spent working but without a decline in job performance. Discussion and conclusions MAT may be a suitable intervention for treating workaholism. Further controlled intervention studies investigating the effects of SG-MBIs on workaholism are warranted.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AdultAwarenessBehavior, AddictiveBurnout, ProfessionalEmploymentFemaleFollow-Up StudiesHumansJob SatisfactionMaleMeditationPsychiatric Status Rating ScalesTreatment Outcome
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy85/10
Quality80/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations23
Citations/Year2.9
Relative Citation Ratio1.77
NIH Percentile70.6%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score1.76
Normalized Score0.70
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