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Fabienne Collette

GIGA-CRC Human Imaging, Université de Liège, Bâtiment B30, Allée du Six Août, 8, Sart Tilman, 4000, Liège, Belgium. f.collette@uliege.be.

3 papers in the library · 31 citations · publishing 2023

Papers

Effects of a mindfulness-based intervention and a health self-management programme on psychological well-being in older adults with subjective cognitive decline: Secondary analyses from the SCD-Well randomised clinical trial.

PloS one January 1, 2023 Marco Schlosser, Harriet Demnitz-King, Thorsten Barnhofer et al. 13 citations

Older adults with subjective cognitive decline (SCD) recruited from memory clinics are at higher risk for dementia and often have reduced well-being due to memory concerns and fear of dementia. A randomized trial compared an 8-week caring mindfulness-based approach for seniors (CMBAS) with a health self-management program (HSMP) in 147 participants. The mindfulness program showed a small advantage over HSMP in improving a sense of connection immediately after the intervention. However, overall psychological well-being, quality of life, and other composite measures did not increase in either group. The findings suggest that these brief non-pharmacological interventions had only limited effects on well-being in SCD.

The Effect of Meditation-Based Interventions on Patients with Fatigue Symptoms: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

Psychologica Belgica January 1, 2023 Florence Requier, Harriet Demnitz-King, Tim Whitfield et al. 12 citations

Meditation-based interventions reduce fatigue in people with chronic diseases, with a moderate overall effect (g = 0.62). The benefit is larger when meditation is compared against no treatment (passive control, g = 0.83) than against other active treatments. The review included 34 randomized controlled trials covering six conditions, mostly cancer (68%). Evidence suggests meditation is a useful non-pharmacological approach for pathological fatigue, though more studies are needed to clarify effects by meditation type, condition, and fatigue type (physical vs. mental).

An 18-month meditation training selectively improves psychological well-being in older adults: A secondary analysis of a randomised controlled trial.

PloS one January 1, 2023 Marco Schlosser, Olga M Klimecki, Fabienne Collette et al. 6 citations

An 18-month meditation training program for healthy older adults aged 65 to 84 improved a composite measure of well-being encompassing awareness, connection, and insight, compared to an active control of English language training. The meditation group also showed significant increases in psychological quality of life, awareness, insight, and the global score from the start to the end of the study. However, meditation did not outperform the active control on the Psychological Well-being Scale total score, and improvements in psychological quality of life were no longer significant after adjusting for multiple comparisons. The trial, involving 137 participants, represents the longest randomized meditation training study to date.