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Unlocking Performance Excellence: Review of Evidence-Based Mindful Meditation.

Plastic and reconstructive surgery
January 1, 1970
Tyler Safran et al. (4 authors)
Journal ArticleReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to review how mindfulness can enhance a surgeon's performance, mindset, interactions, and execution based on recent scientific advancements and evidence.

Results Summary

The study found that regular mindfulness practice decreases burnout rates, reduces medical errors, improves sleep, and enhances surgical performance. It suggests mindfulness as a valuable tool for surgeons and physicians to manage stress and improve overall performance.

Population

Surgeons, physicians, and medical professionals, particularly those in high-stress, fast-paced environments.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (8)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
Regular practice of mindfulness
decrease
rates of burnout
-
-
decrease
#1
Regular practice of mindfulness
decrease
medical errors
-
-
decrease
#2
Regular practice of mindfulness
increase
sleep
-
-
improve
#3
Regular practice of mindfulness
increase
surgical performance
-
-
improve
#4
mindful meditation
increase
a surgeon's performance
surgeons
-
enhance
#5
mindful meditation
increase
mindset
surgeons
-
enhance
#6
mindful meditation
increase
interactions
surgeons
-
enhance
#7
mindful meditation
increase
execution
surgeons
-
enhance
#8
Abstract

Mindfulness has recently been implemented by advanced military combatants, firefighters, and those in other very intellectually demanding and fast-paced professions. A surgeon, similarly, is faced with many difficult challenges, whether it be a complex and meticulous surgery, extensive clinical responsibilities, or simply the challenges faced in residency. In current curricula, there is no training to introspectively deal with these stressors. Regardless of what we face in our personal lives, the lives of patients are literately in our hands. Would it not be prudent and wise to train our brain to not only deliver care to our patients but also be able to take care of us and maybe even improve our performance? Regular practice of mindfulness has been shown to decrease rates of burnout, decrease medical errors, improve sleep, and even improve surgical performance. With the ever-changing pandemic situation and increasing stressors in the hospital, mindful meditation is perfectly primed to be added to our armamentarium as surgeons and physicians. This review aims to explain how mindfulness can enhance a surgeon's performance, mindset, interactions, and execution through a review of recent scientific advancements and evidence.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
BrainBurnout, ProfessionalHumansMeditationMindfulnessSurgeons
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy85/10
Quality75/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations5
Citations/Year1.7
Relative Citation Ratio1.22
NIH Percentile57.7%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.25
Weight Score1.51
Normalized Score0.69
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