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MBCARE, a mindfulness- and self-compassion-based intervention to decrease burnout and promote self-compassion in health care providers.

Laurent Charvin, Alexis Akinyemi, Jean-Yves Mariette, Claire Mizzi, Thierry Cardoso, Ciaran Grufeille, Clémence Brun, Corinne Isnard Bagnis

BMC psychology May 19, 2025 DOI: 10.1186/s40359-025-02745-6

Summary

Did you know that supporting health care professionals can directly improve their well-being? A program combining Mindfulness and self-Compassion significantly reduced Burnout and Stress among nurses and doctors. This intervention aimed to boost their personal accomplishment and emotional regulation. Participants showed increased positive Emotions, enhancing their ability to cope. While Patient-centeredness of care was already high, the training proved feasible and effective in fostering greater self-Compassion and reducing professional Stress for these dedicated health care professionals.

Abstract

Mindfulness and compassion training have individually shown significant effects on health care professionals' (HCPs') skills, reducing stress, anxiety, and burnout. This study evaluated the impact of a combined mindfulness and self-compassion intervention on HCPs' wellness. Seventeen nurses and doctors at a teaching university hospital in France volunteered for the Mindfulness-Based Compassion and Resilience Enhancement (MBCARE) program, a four-week mindfulness and self-compassion training delivered in eight three-hour sessions over four days (one day per week), with 100% attendance. We collected primary data (mindfulness skills, burnout scores, self-compassion, and emotional coping via face-reader evaluations) before and after the intervention. MBCARE was associated with reduced burnout, with emotional exhaustion scores decreasing (MΔ = -4.27, t = 1.95, p = .04) and personal accomplishment scores increasing (MΔ = 2.73, z = 2.48, p = .007) among 12 health care professionals. Patient-perceived centeredness of care showed a ceiling effect, with no significant changes. In a socio-affective video task (n = 7), positive affect increased post-training (p < .05), while negative affect remained stable. Time and availability constraints limited participation, but the program was feasible. Professional contextualization may support skill application, potentially improving emotional regulation and self-compassion, though further research is needed to confirm these effects. Implementing mindfulness and compassion training for HCPs faces time and availability constraints but meets their needs. Contextualizing the training to professional settings enhances HCPs' ability to apply new skills, yielding benefits in emotional stability and self-compassion.

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