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The Gerontologist

ISSN 1758-5341

3 papers in the library · 33 citations · publishing 1993-2025

Papers

Age Differences in Mystical Experience

The Gerontologist August 1, 1993 Jeffrey S. Levin 29 citations

Mystical experiences such as déjà vu, ESP, clairvoyance, spiritualism, and numinous experiences are somewhat more common in the late 1980s than in the early 1970s. Among 1,481 respondents to the 1988 General Social Survey, younger age cohorts report more déjà vu, clairvoyance, and overall mystical experiences than older cohorts. Private and subjective religiosity are positively linked to overall mystical experience, whereas organizational religiosity (e.g., church attendance) is inversely related.

Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial of the Feasibility of a Mobile App-Delivered Mindfulness-Based Intervention for Caregiver Stress.

The Gerontologist May 10, 2025 Evan Plys, Morgan Seward, Elizabeth M Allen et al. 3 citations

A mobile app-delivered mindfulness program for dementia caregivers (Healthy Minds Program for Caregivers) was feasible and acceptable in a pilot randomized trial with 95 participants. Feasibility benchmarks were met for enrollment, retention, and data collection. The intervention improved mindfulness and positive aspects of caregiving with large effects, and changes in these targets correlated with stress reduction. However, improvements in stress, depression, and anxiety were not statistically significant compared with an education podcast control, though trends favored the mindfulness program. A fully powered trial is warranted to test efficacy.

The Effectiveness of a Hybrid Mindfulness-Based Intervention in Reducing Stress Among Informal Caregivers of People with Dementia: A Randomized Controlled Trial.

The Gerontologist November 23, 2025 Patrick Pui Kin Kor, Alex Pak Lik Tsang, Daniel Lok Lam Lai et al. 1 citation

A simplified, hybrid mindfulness program delivered in six weekly sessions (face-to-face and online) reduced perceived stress and depressive symptoms and improved heart rate variability and trait mindfulness in 127 dementia caregivers in Hong Kong, compared with a brief education program. No significant effects were found on caregiving burden, dyadic relationships, positive caregiving aspects, or neuropsychiatric symptoms of care recipients. The results suggest that a less intensive, hybrid format can make mindfulness training more accessible and effective for caregivers who face time and responsibility constraints.