Mindfulness-Based Interventions: A Coming of Age?

Author: Krasner M
Affiliation:
University of Rochester
Conference/Journal: Families Systems & Health
Date published: 2004 Jun
Other: Volume ID: 22 , Issue ID: 2 , Pages: 207-212 , Word Count: 133


Mindfulness-based interventions are being reported with increasing frequency in the empirical medical literature. The increased person-centered locus of control reported in A. M. Tacon, Y. M. Caldera, and C. Ronaghan (2004; see record 2004-16968-008) among breast cancer patients engaged in mindfulness-based stress reduction reflects a medical paradigm that empowers the individual to work with one's own stress, illness, challenges, and demands of daily living. In addition to the clinical applications of mindfulness-based interventions appearing in the literature, and the areas for further investigation and research, it is important to place these interventions in a context in which the practitioner and patients are equally engaged in the intervention. In this way, they both share in a truly participatory, biopsychosocially oriented medicine, where bidirectional healing takes place. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved)

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