Exploring the impact of mindfulness-based training on the well-being of physical therapists.
Akash Patel, Ruchi Bhargava, Gretchen Roman
Journal of clinical and translational science January 1, 2023 DOI: 10.1017/cts.2023.666
Summary
Mindfulness-based training (MBT) significantly enhances the well-being of physical therapists, with 89% reporting improved work engagement and mental health after six sessions. In a pilot study involving 13 therapists (35.4 years on average), those participating in MBT showed reduced moral distress and increased job satisfaction compared to a control group. Key themes emerged, highlighting challenges like compassion fatigue and self-care prioritization. These findings suggest that implementing MBT could bolster therapist well-being, leading to better employee retention and improved patient care outcomes.
Abstract
Experimental evidence is needed to evaluate interventions that curtail burnout for physical therapists. The goal of this research was to assess the impact of mindfulness-based training (MBT) on the well-being of physical therapists. We hypothesized physical therapists would demonstrate greater work engagement, empathy, and job satisfaction, and lower depression, anxiety, stress, and moral distress following MBT. Thirteen physical therapists (10 female/3 male; 35.38 ± 9.32 years old) completed this two-arm embedded mixed-methods pilot study. The control group (n = 4) was followed while the intervention group (n = 9) completed six MBT sessions over 3 months. Sessions were assigned a representative topic area (meaning in physical therapy, situational- and self-awareness, compassion fatigue/burnout, implicit biases, establishing boundaries and managing conflict, self-care) with relevant reflective writing, small group discussions, and mindfulness strategies. Non-parametric statistics compared quantitative outcomes across and within groups, and a thematic framework matrix was established by way of qualitative description for data analysis. Physical therapists in the intervention group had improved pre- to post-scores for work engagement, mental health, and moral distress (p ≤ 0.043). Inability to effect change contributed to compassion fatigue/burnout, whereas difficulty prioritizing self/limited personal time impeded self-care. "I realized how easy it is to get caught up in life and in helping out those around you, you completely forget to take time to check in with how you are doing (Physical Therapist 3)." Implementing an MBT program demonstrates promise and may benefit the well-being of physical therapists while simultaneously enhancing employee retention and improving patient care.