Journal of psychosomatic research
April 1, 2025
Mengting Zhu, Samuel Yeung-Shan Wong, Claire Chenwen Zhong et al.
13 citations
A network meta-analysis of 68 studies with 5,339 participants compared different mindfulness-based interventions for chronic pain. Mindfulness-based stress reduction showed the strongest evidence for reducing pain intensity and depression, with moderate to high certainty. Mindfulness-oriented recovery enhancement was most effective for improving physical function, though the evidence was low certainty. An 8-week course with weekly 90- to 120-minute sessions appeared optimal for addressing pain, physical function, and depression. These findings support the use of mindfulness-based interventions in chronic pain management and help inform evidence-based guidelines.
BMC complementary medicine and therapies
July 17, 2023
Jojo Yan Yan Kwok, Man Auyeung, Shirley Yin Yu Pang et al.
6 citations
A trial will test whether individual mindfulness techniques—meditation or yoga—help Parkinson's disease patients manage anxiety and depression, which affect 40–50% of patients. Participants will be randomly assigned to meditation, yoga, or usual care for 8 weeks. The study measures anxiety, depression, motor and non-motor symptoms, quality of life, mindfulness, and stress biomarkers at baseline, 8 weeks, and 24 weeks. Qualitative interviews with 30 participants per intervention group will explore their experiences. The research aims to inform community-based, nurse-led compassionate care models for neurodegenerative conditions.
BMJ mental health
February 1, 2026
Elvin Tsz-Fung Wong, Eric Kam-Pui Lee, Phoenix Kit-Han Mo et al.
Loneliness is common among Chinese older adults. A randomized controlled trial compared an 8-week mindfulness-based intervention for older adults (MBOA) with a social contact control (SCC) in 245 community-dwelling lonely adults aged 60 or older in Hong Kong. At 12 months, there was no significant difference in loneliness reduction between the two groups, though both improved (within-group effect size: MBOA -0.58, SCC -0.31). MBOA participants showed reduced depressive symptoms and a trend toward less anxiety at 6 months compared with SCC. The findings suggest MBOA is not superior to social contact for loneliness but may benefit psychological symptoms.