Abstract

ObjectivesHealthcare staff can be prone to high levels of stress and research investigating mindfulness-based courses for this population is showing promise. Given the demands of healthcare work, shortened mindfulness courses may be more appropriate. The aim of the study was to evaluate the utility of a workplace-adapted mindfulness course (MBOE) in a hospital setting, including research on workplace-specific outcomes beyond stress reduction and data relating to home practice with a mobile app.MethodThe effects of assignment to a workplace-adapted, 6-week mindfulness course or a waitlist control condition on dispositional mindfulness, perceived stress and fulfilment of basic psychological needs at work were examined in a sample of 65 hospital staff.ResultsCompared with waitlist, staff taking the course showed significant increases in mindfulness and psychological need fulfilment and reductions in perceived stress. Mean levels of perceived stress reduced from a high level to within published norms. Reductions in stress and increases in mindfulness, autonomy and competence remained stable at follow-up. Increased mindfulness mediated improvements in need fulfilment and reductions in stress. Attendance and use of a mobile app for home practice were associated with positive outcomes. Social factors (relatedness) associated with the delivery and outcome of the course were also explored.ConclusionsThe results indicate that a workplace-adapted, short-format mindfulness course can achieve positive results in line with mindfulness courses for other contexts. Questions were raised regarding which distinct elements may improve outcomes, e.g. home practice and dispositional mindfulness vs. learning environment on more general improvements.

Highlights

  • Two studies have shown improvements in depression, stress, anxiety and burnout when examining a modified, shortened Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) course supplied to healthcare workers (Fortney et al 2013; Manotas et al 2014). While these results show promise, a review of empirical workplace mindfulness studies (Jamieson and Tuckey 2017) raised concerns that a lack of integrity of some courses could lead to them being ineffective

  • Several courses of Mindfulness-Based Organisational Education (MBOE) were delivered by the company BMindfulness Connected^ over two 6-week periods to employees of the Royal Orthopaedic Hospital (ROH) in Birmingham

  • This study examined the potential of a short-format, workplace-adapted mindfulness course delivered to hospital staff, including a control comparison group with a 1-month follow-up

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Summary

Objectives

Healthcare staff can be prone to high levels of stress and research investigating mindfulness-based courses for this population is showing promise. The aim of the study was to evaluate the utility of a workplace-adapted mindfulness course (MBOE) in a hospital setting, including research on workplace-specific outcomes beyond stress reduction and data relating to home practice with a mobile app. Method The effects of assignment to a workplace-adapted, 6-week mindfulness course or a waitlist control condition on dispositional mindfulness, perceived stress and fulfilment of basic psychological needs at work were examined in a sample of 65 hospital staff. Results Compared with waitlist, staff taking the course showed significant increases in mindfulness and psychological need fulfilment and reductions in perceived stress. Increased mindfulness mediated improvements in need fulfilment and reductions in stress. Social factors (relatedness) associated with the delivery and outcome of the course were explored

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