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Benjamin Le Cook

Cambridge Health Alliance, Department of Psychiatry, United States; Harvard Medical School, Department of Psychiatry, United States.

1 paper in the library · 10 citations · publishing 2024

Papers

Change starts with the body: Interoceptive appreciation mediates the effect of mindfulness training on behavior change - an effect moderated by depression severity.

Psychiatry research December 1, 2024 Zev Schuman-Olivier, Richa Gawande, Timothy B Creedon et al. 10 citations

Mindfulness training helps people change health behaviors partly by improving how they listen to and trust internal bodily signals, a process called interoceptive appreciation. In a randomized trial with 274 primary care patients who had depression, anxiety, or stress disorders related to chronic illness, those who received Mindfulness Training for Primary Care showed greater initiation of a chosen health behavior action plan compared to a low-dose mindfulness group. The effect was mediated by interoceptive appreciation: among patients without depression, listening to bodily signals played a key role; among those with moderate-to-severe depression, trusting bodily signals was more important. Regaining body trust may be a crucial step for behavior change in depression.