Mindfulness for Novice Pediatric Nurses: Smartphone Application Versus Traditional Intervention.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to compare the effects of traditionally delivered mindfulness (TDM) versus smartphone-delivered mindfulness (SDM) interventions on novice nurses' mindfulness skills, compassion satisfaction, burnout, and compassion fatigue.
Results Summary
Nurses in the SDM group showed significantly improved "acting with awareness" and marginally better "non-reactivity to inner experience," along with marginally higher compassion satisfaction and lower burnout. The SDM group also had lower compassion fatigue risk, but only for nurses without pre-existing posttraumatic stress symptoms.
Population
Novice nurses in a pediatric nurse residency program (N=95).
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
3 months
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
smartphone delivered mindfulness (SDM) intervention, Headspace, an audio-guided mindfulness meditation program | increase | "acting with awareness" skills | novice nurses | - | reported significantly more | #1 |
smartphone delivered mindfulness (SDM) intervention, Headspace, an audio-guided mindfulness meditation program | increase | "non-reactivity to inner experience" skills | novice nurses | - | reported marginally more | #2 |
smartphone delivered mindfulness (SDM) intervention, Headspace, an audio-guided mindfulness meditation program | increase | compassion satisfaction | novice nurses | - | showed marginally more | #3 |
smartphone delivered mindfulness (SDM) intervention, Headspace, an audio-guided mindfulness meditation program | decrease | burnout | novice nurses | - | showed marginally less | #4 |
smartphone delivered mindfulness (SDM) intervention, Headspace, an audio-guided mindfulness meditation program | decrease | compassion fatigue | novice nurses with sub-clinical posttraumatic symptoms at the start of the residency training program | - | had lower risk for | #5 |
PURPOSE: The current study compares the effects of a traditionally delivered mindfulness (TDM) intervention to a smartphone delivered mindfulness (SDM) intervention, Headspace, an audio-guided mindfulness meditation program, in a group of novice nurses. DESIGN AND METHODS: Novice nurses participating in a pediatric nurse residency program were asked to participate in either a TDM or SDM intervention. Participants (N=95) completed self-administered pencil and paper questionnaires measuring mindfulness skills, and risk and protective factors at the start of their residency and three months after entering the program. RESULTS: Nurses in the SDM group reported significantly more "acting with awareness" and marginally more "non-reactivity to inner experience" skills compared to the TDM group. The smartphone intervention group also showed marginally more compassion satisfaction and marginally less burnout. Additionally, nurses in the SDM group had lower risk for compassion fatigue compared to the TDM group, but only when the nurses had sub-clinical posttraumatic symptoms at the start of the residency training program. CONCLUSIONS: Smartphone delivered mindfulness interventions may provide more benefits for novice nurses than traditionally delivered mindfulness interventions. However, the smart-phone intervention may be better indicated for nurses without existing symptoms of posttraumatic stress. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS: Mindfulness interventions delivered through smartphone applications show promise in equipping nurses with important coping skills to manage stress. Because of the accessibility of smartphone applications, more nurses can benefit from the intervention as compared to a therapist delivered intervention. However, nurses with existing stress symptoms may require alternate interventions.