1. Randomized Controlled Trial of Mindfulness Meditation and Exercise for the Prevention of Acute Respiratory Infection: Possible Mechanisms of Action.
- Author
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Zgierska, Aleksandra, Obasi, Chidi N., Brown, Roger, Ewers, Tola, Muller, Daniel, Gassman, Michele, Barlow, Shari, and Barrett, Bruce
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INFECTION prevention , *RESPIRATORY disease prevention , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *EXERCISE , *EXERCISE physiology , *MEDITATION , *RESEARCH funding , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *PROPORTIONAL hazards models , *BLIND experiment , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background. A randomized trial suggests that meditation and exercise may prevent acute respiratory infection (ARI). This paper explores potential mediating mechanisms. Methods. Community-recruited adults were randomly assigned to three nonblinded arms: 8-week mindfulness-based stress reduction (N = 51), moderate-intensity exercise (N = 51), or wait-list control (N = 52). Primary outcomes were ARI illness burden (validated Wisconsin Upper Respiratory Symptom Survey). Potential mediators included self-reported psychophysical health and exercise intensity (baseline, 9 weeks, and 3 months). A Baron and Kenny approach-based mediational analysis model, adjusted for group status, age, and gender, evaluated the relationship between the primary outcome and a potential mediator using zero-inflated modeling and Sobel testing. Results. Of 154 randomized, 149 completed the trial (51, 47, and 51 in meditation, exercise, and control groups) and were analyzed (82% female, 94% Caucasian, 59.3 ±SD 6.6 years old). Mediational analyses suggested that improved mindfulness (Mindful Attention Awareness Scale) at 3 months may mediate intervention effects on ARI severity and duration (P < 0.05); 1 point increase in the mindfulness score corresponded to a shortened ARI duration by 7.2-9.6 hours. Conclusions. Meditation and exercise may decrease the ARI illness burden through increased mindfulness. These preliminary findings need confirmation, if confirmed, they would have important policy and clinical implications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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