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Comparing the Effectiveness of Virtual and In-Person Delivery of Mindfulness-Based Skills Within Healthcare Curriculums

PURPOSE: To promote well-being, healthcare education programs have incorporated mindfulness-based skills and principles into existing curriculums. Pandemic-related restrictions have compelled programs to deliver content virtually. Study objectives were to determine (1) whether teaching mindfulness-b...

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Autores principales: Hoover, Eve B., Butaney, Bhupin, Bernard, Kari, Coplan, Bettie, LeLacheur, Susan, Straker, Howard, Carr, Candra, Blesse-Hampton, Laura, Naidu, Amee, LaRue, Audrey
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer US 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9043883/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35493985
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40670-022-01554-5
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author Hoover, Eve B.
Butaney, Bhupin
Bernard, Kari
Coplan, Bettie
LeLacheur, Susan
Straker, Howard
Carr, Candra
Blesse-Hampton, Laura
Naidu, Amee
LaRue, Audrey
author_facet Hoover, Eve B.
Butaney, Bhupin
Bernard, Kari
Coplan, Bettie
LeLacheur, Susan
Straker, Howard
Carr, Candra
Blesse-Hampton, Laura
Naidu, Amee
LaRue, Audrey
author_sort Hoover, Eve B.
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: To promote well-being, healthcare education programs have incorporated mindfulness-based skills and principles into existing curriculums. Pandemic-related restrictions have compelled programs to deliver content virtually. Study objectives were to determine (1) whether teaching mindfulness-based skills within physician assistant (PA) programs can promote well-being and (2) whether delivery type (virtual vs. in-person) can impact the effectiveness. METHODS: During this 2-year study, a brief mindfulness-based curriculum was delivered to incoming first-year students at six PA programs, while students at two programs served as controls. The curriculum was delivered in-person in year one and virtually in year two. Validated pre- and post-test survey items assessed mindfulness (decentering ability, present moment attention and awareness, and psychological flexibility) and well-being (perceived stress and life satisfaction). RESULTS: As expected, coping abilities and well-being were adversely impacted by educational demands. The mindfulness-based curriculum intervention was effective in increasing mindfulness and life satisfaction, while decreasing perceived stress when delivered in-person. Virtual curricular delivery was effective in decreasing perceived stress but not improving life satisfaction. Over half of the participants receiving the curriculum reported positive changes on mindfulness measures with approximately 14–38% reporting a change of greater than one standard deviation. Changes on mindfulness measures explained 30–38% of the reported changes in perceived stress and 22–26% of the changes in life satisfaction. Therefore, the mindfulness curriculum demonstrated statistically significant improvements in measures of mindfulness and mitigated declines in life satisfaction and perceived stress. CONCLUSION: Mindfulness-based skills effectively taught in-person or virtually within PA programs successfully promote well-being.
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spelling pubmed-90438832022-04-27 Comparing the Effectiveness of Virtual and In-Person Delivery of Mindfulness-Based Skills Within Healthcare Curriculums Hoover, Eve B. Butaney, Bhupin Bernard, Kari Coplan, Bettie LeLacheur, Susan Straker, Howard Carr, Candra Blesse-Hampton, Laura Naidu, Amee LaRue, Audrey Med Sci Educ Original Research PURPOSE: To promote well-being, healthcare education programs have incorporated mindfulness-based skills and principles into existing curriculums. Pandemic-related restrictions have compelled programs to deliver content virtually. Study objectives were to determine (1) whether teaching mindfulness-based skills within physician assistant (PA) programs can promote well-being and (2) whether delivery type (virtual vs. in-person) can impact the effectiveness. METHODS: During this 2-year study, a brief mindfulness-based curriculum was delivered to incoming first-year students at six PA programs, while students at two programs served as controls. The curriculum was delivered in-person in year one and virtually in year two. Validated pre- and post-test survey items assessed mindfulness (decentering ability, present moment attention and awareness, and psychological flexibility) and well-being (perceived stress and life satisfaction). RESULTS: As expected, coping abilities and well-being were adversely impacted by educational demands. The mindfulness-based curriculum intervention was effective in increasing mindfulness and life satisfaction, while decreasing perceived stress when delivered in-person. Virtual curricular delivery was effective in decreasing perceived stress but not improving life satisfaction. Over half of the participants receiving the curriculum reported positive changes on mindfulness measures with approximately 14–38% reporting a change of greater than one standard deviation. Changes on mindfulness measures explained 30–38% of the reported changes in perceived stress and 22–26% of the changes in life satisfaction. Therefore, the mindfulness curriculum demonstrated statistically significant improvements in measures of mindfulness and mitigated declines in life satisfaction and perceived stress. CONCLUSION: Mindfulness-based skills effectively taught in-person or virtually within PA programs successfully promote well-being. Springer US 2022-04-27 /pmc/articles/PMC9043883/ /pubmed/35493985 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40670-022-01554-5 Text en © The Author(s) under exclusive licence to International Association of Medical Science Educators 2022
spellingShingle Original Research
Hoover, Eve B.
Butaney, Bhupin
Bernard, Kari
Coplan, Bettie
LeLacheur, Susan
Straker, Howard
Carr, Candra
Blesse-Hampton, Laura
Naidu, Amee
LaRue, Audrey
Comparing the Effectiveness of Virtual and In-Person Delivery of Mindfulness-Based Skills Within Healthcare Curriculums
title Comparing the Effectiveness of Virtual and In-Person Delivery of Mindfulness-Based Skills Within Healthcare Curriculums
title_full Comparing the Effectiveness of Virtual and In-Person Delivery of Mindfulness-Based Skills Within Healthcare Curriculums
title_fullStr Comparing the Effectiveness of Virtual and In-Person Delivery of Mindfulness-Based Skills Within Healthcare Curriculums
title_full_unstemmed Comparing the Effectiveness of Virtual and In-Person Delivery of Mindfulness-Based Skills Within Healthcare Curriculums
title_short Comparing the Effectiveness of Virtual and In-Person Delivery of Mindfulness-Based Skills Within Healthcare Curriculums
title_sort comparing the effectiveness of virtual and in-person delivery of mindfulness-based skills within healthcare curriculums
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9043883/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35493985
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40670-022-01554-5
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