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The American journal of orthopsychiatry

ISSN 1939-0025

3 papers in the library · 4 citations · publishing 2025

Papers

Spiritual empowerment: A conceptual model of mindfulness-based healing for Muslim mothers.

The American journal of orthopsychiatry July 28, 2025 Sehrish Malik 2 citations

Muslim mothers in Western nations face unique stressors such as Islamophobia, cultural stigma, and social isolation. A spiritually integrated mindfulness support group, based on Imam al-Ghazali's framework and incorporating Islamic practices like muraqaba, dhikr, and tawakkul, can alleviate stress, foster spiritual growth, and strengthen community bonds. The Mindfulness Meditation Fundamentals pilot program taught participants mindfulness concepts and Islamic coping strategies, creating a 'homeplace' for resistance and cultural preservation. The article suggests that such mindfulness practice is uniquely conducive to spiritual empowerment and collective healing for Muslim mothers.

No breath(work) without bread: Toward an integrated paradigm for community-owned mindfulness interventions to address structural drivers of human development and health disparities.

The American journal of orthopsychiatry March 24, 2025 Matthew J Lyons, Deanna M Kaplan, Sarah H Cross et al. 1 citation

Mindfulness-based interventions (MBIs) show promise for improving health outcomes, but their effectiveness varies significantly across populations. In low-resource settings, focusing solely on individual change overlooks critical structural issues affecting health. With a call to action for community ownership and engagement, it’s essential to address inequities in power and incorporate cross-sector collaboration. By centering community-defined needs and integrating complementary interventions, MBIs can better serve vulnerable populations, potentially leading to significant positive social change and improved health outcomes for those most in need.

Contemplative practices and the movement toward a more just criminal legal system.

The American journal of orthopsychiatry February 17, 2025 Daniel W Grupe, Sophia Diamantis, Carmen Alonso 1 citation

Contemplative practices like mindfulness can support justice in the criminal legal system, but their impact depends on the ethical framework and context. Over eight years of research with police officers and incarcerated individuals—both groups traumatized by an unjust system—qualitative interviews with officers suggest that focusing too much on individual resilience may limit interpersonal benefits and critical awareness of systemic injustice. Community advisors recommend that police training be more responsive to community concerns. An advisory board of formerly incarcerated individuals advises that mindfulness can best support community reentry by foregrounding shared humanity. To advance justice, practitioners must be explicit about ethics, target individuals and organizations capable of systems change, and emphasize shared humanity over perceived differences.