Psychoneuroendocrinology
June 1, 2011
Tonya L Jacobs, Elissa S Epel, Jue Lin et al.
435 citations
After a 3-month meditation retreat with about 6 hours of daily practice, retreat participants showed greater telomerase activity—an indicator of cellular longevity—compared to a matched wait-list control group. Retreat participants also reported increased Perceived Control, Mindfulness, and Purpose in Life, and decreased Neuroticism. Statistical mediation analyses suggested that the retreat's effect on telomerase activity was explained by increases in Perceived Control and decreases in Neuroticism. These changes in perceived control and neuroticism were themselves partially explained by increased Mindfulness and Purpose in Life. Purpose in Life also directly mediated the group difference in telomerase activity, whereas Mindfulness did not. The findings suggest that meditation may influence cellular health through psychological changes.
Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association
October 1, 2013
Tonya L Jacobs, Phillip R Shaver, Elissa S Epel et al.
62 citations
Cognitive perseverations such as worry and rumination may prolong cortisol release, potentially contributing to disease pathways. Meditation training can increase self-reported mindfulness, which is linked to reductions in such perseverations, but no prior work directly linked mindfulness to resting cortisol output. In an observational study of 57 adults on a 3-month meditation retreat, mindfulness increased from pre- to post-retreat, while cortisol did not significantly change overall. However, mindfulness was inversely related to evening cortisol at both time points, and larger increases in mindfulness were associated with decreases in cortisol, whereas smaller increases or slight decreases in mindfulness were linked to increases in cortisol. These findings suggest a relationship between self-reported mindfulness and resting output of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal system.
JAMA network open
January 2, 2025
Rachel M Radin, Julie Vacarro, Elena Fromer et al.
11 citations
A brief digital mindfulness meditation program, compared to a waiting list, reduced perceived stress and job strain among employees of a large academic medical center. In a randomized clinical trial with 1458 adults (mostly female, average age 35.5 years), those assigned to 10 minutes of daily meditation for 8 weeks showed moderate to large improvements in stress and secondary outcomes like burnout and work engagement at 8 weeks, and these benefits persisted at 4 months. Greater daily use of the app (5 to 9.9 minutes versus less than 5 minutes) was linked to larger stress reductions. The findings suggest that a scalable digital meditation program can effectively lower stress in the workplace.
Frontiers in endocrinology
January 1, 2024
Quinn A Conklin, Anthony P Zanesco, Brandon G King et al.
A month-long silent meditation retreat reduced circulating levels of oxytocin in 28 retreat participants compared to 34 control participants, who showed no change. Higher openness to experience at the start predicted greater oxytocin decreases, and lower oxytocin at the end was linked to stronger feelings of personal connection with fellow meditators. Oxytocin changes were unrelated to attachment style or anxiety. Vasopressin decreased similarly in both groups, indicating no specific retreat effect. The authors interpret these preliminary findings cautiously, noting measurement limitations and suggesting future research to differentiate effects of meditation practices and contexts on oxytocin signaling.