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Erica Sibinga

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.

2 papers in the library · 2,325 citations · publishing 2014-2025

Papers

Meditation Programs for Psychological Stress and Well-being

JAMA Internal Medicine January 6, 2014 Madhav Goyal, Sonal Singh, Erica Sibinga et al. 2,323 citations

A meta-analysis of 47 randomized clinical trials with 3,515 participants found that mindfulness meditation programs produce small to moderate reductions in anxiety, depression, and pain compared to placebo controls. At 8 weeks, effect sizes were 0.38 for anxiety, 0.30 for depression, and 0.33 for pain; benefits for anxiety and depression persisted at 3–6 months. Evidence for improved stress, distress, and mental health-related quality of life was low, and there was insufficient or no evidence that meditation improves positive mood, attention, substance use, eating habits, sleep, or weight. Meditation programs were not superior to active treatments such as drugs, exercise, or other behavioral therapies.

Longitudinal analysis of the role of mindfulness on HIV stigma, depression, substance use and HIV outcomes among female sex workers living with HIV in the Dominican Republic.

AIDS care January 1, 2025 Yan Wang, Carla J Berg, Yeycy Donastorg et al. 2 citations

Among female sex workers living with HIV in the Dominican Republic, greater mindfulness was linked to lower depression and HIV stigma, and higher antiretroviral therapy adherence both at the same time and at later time points. Higher mindfulness also showed contemporaneous associations with reduced at-risk alcohol use and higher viral suppression. The findings suggest that mindfulness instruction could help improve mental health and HIV outcomes in this population.