Doing what matters in times of stress: No-nonsense meditation and occupational well-being in COVID-19.

PloS one  – January 01, 2023

Source: PubMed

Summary

Focused attention meditation significantly enhances teachers' well-being, particularly during challenging times like the COVID-19 pandemic. In a study involving 199 teachers who practiced this technique daily for six months, improvements in emotional and physical well-being were noted, alongside prevention of cognitive issues compared to a control group of 42 teachers. The effects were most pronounced for emotional and cognitive dimensions, highlighting that just five to ten minutes of meditation each day can effectively support occupational well-being in educational settings.

Abstract

While the COVID-19 pandemic challenged the general public's health and well-being, it exacerbated the pre-existing well-being issues in the educational sector in many countries. Mindfulness-based interventions are often applied to protect and promote occupational well-being. To investigate how the well-being benefits of these interventions arise, we selected one accessible technique that is used in most of them: focused attention meditation. In the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic, 199 teachers voluntarily practiced five to ten minutes of meditation together with their pupils, every morning for six months. We employed a three-wave longitudinal design to follow any changes in the meditating teachers' well-being and compared these changes to a waitlist control condition of 42 teachers. Three dimensions of well-being were measured at baseline, half-time, and post-intervention: emotional, cognitive, and physical well-being. Latent growth curve models revealed that the meditation technique not only improves well-being but also prevents the development of well-being problems. The practice of focused attention meditation resulted in improvements in emotional and physical well-being and prevented the development of cognitive well-being problems that were observed within the control condition. The effects were strongest for emotional and cognitive well-being and followed a linear trend. This paper shows that the well-being effects of mindfulness-based interventions are at least in part due to the focused attention meditation that is practiced in them. Occupational groups that experience emotional, cognitive, or physical well-being issues can benefit from a few minutes of focused attention meditation per day. Trial registration: ISRCTN ISRCTN61170784 (https://doi.org/10.1186/ISRCTN61170784).

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