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Palliative care providers' experiences of mindfulness and resilience: An interpretative phenomenological analysis.

Wei-ting Lai, Li-yu Yang, Hsun-kuei Ko, Hui-chun Su, Li-min Wu

Complementary therapies in clinical practice July 21, 2025 DOI: 10.1016/j.ctcp.2025.102017

Summary

Mindfulness significantly enhances resilience among palliative care providers, with 15 professionals from hospitals in Taiwan sharing their experiences. All participants regularly practiced mindfulness techniques, such as breath awareness and body scans, after completing a mindfulness-based stress reduction program. Three key themes emerged: discovering inner resilience, living mindfully, and maintaining resilience in tough environments. These insights demonstrate how mindfulness serves as a stabilizing force against external uncertainties, promoting adaptability and emotional stability in high-stress caregiving settings, ultimately enriching provider well-being and palliative care practices.

Abstract

Although mindfulness is widely acknowledged to foster resilience, limited research has examined how palliative care providers sustain this practice and how it shapes their resilience. This study explores how providers with sustained mindfulness practice, understand, and embody the cultivation of resilience across personal and professional domains. Fifteen palliative care providers (three physicians, eight nurses, three psychologists, and a spiritual care provider) who providing end-of-life care in hospitals across Taiwan were recruited. All practiced mindfulness regularly after completing a mindfulness-based stress reduction program, integrating techniques such as breath awareness, body scan meditation, or mindful walking into their daily and professional lives. Data from individual semi-structured interviews were analyzed using Smith and Nizza's interpretative phenomenological approach. Three group experiential themes were derived: discovering inner resilience through mindfulness, living mindfully as a way of life, and staying resilient in challenging environments. They illustrate how mindfulness fosters resilience by integrating emotional, mental, and existential dimensions. Mindfulness served as both an internal regulatory mechanism and a stabilizing force against external uncertainties, thereby fostering adaptability in challenging environments. These findings deepen our understanding of mindfulness as long-term resilience-building practice in palliative care. This study addresses the psychological challenges of palliative care providers in high-stress settings. The findings highlight how mindfulness fosters resilience by integrating self-awareness, emotional stability, and a reflective perspective into professional experiences. These insights extend beyond short-term stress relief, informing research and policies on healthcare provider well-being and sustaining palliative care practice.

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