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Melanie J. V. Fennell

2 papers in the library · 467 citations · publishing 2005-2011

Papers

Mindfulness‐Based cognitive therapy for prevention of recurrence of suicidal behavior

Journal of Clinical Psychology December 9, 2005 J. Mark G. Williams, Danielle S. Duggan, Catherine Crane et al. 235 citations

Once suicidal thoughts emerge in depression, they tend to return whenever sad mood reappears, part of a suicidal mode of mind. This article reviews how mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) may prevent reactivation of that suicidal mode. MBCT combines mindfulness meditation with cognitive therapy, training participants to observe moment-by-moment experience with nonjudgmental acceptance. This helps people see thoughts as mental events rather than facts, a skill called metacognitive awareness. A case example illustrates how mindfulness skills develop and relate to cognitive processes fueling suicidal crises. Pilot work suggests MBCT is a promising intervention for those with past suicidal ideation; an ongoing controlled trial will provide further evidence.

Competence in Teaching Mindfulness-Based Courses: Concepts, Development and Assessment

Mindfulness September 21, 2011 Rebecca S. Crane, Willem Kuyken, J. Mark G. Williams et al. 232 citations

Interest in Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) and Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) has grown rapidly in the UK, prompting health, education, and social work practitioners to develop competencies as mindfulness-based teachers. This has raised fundamental questions about training processes, standards, and competence assessment. The paper examines how competencies are addressed in secular mainstream contexts, presents a framework for how teaching competencies develop in trainees, and reviews current assessment methodologies. The authors argue for continued international dialogue among mindfulness-based trainers and teachers to build a robust professional context for future teachers.