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Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association

ISSN 1930-7810

1 paper in the library · 62 citations · publishing 2013

Papers

Self-reported mindfulness and cortisol during a Shamatha meditation retreat.

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.