By Louise Kinross
Parent-led
groups in mindfulness meditation and positive psychology significantly reduce stress, depression and anxiety in mothers of kids with
developmental disabilities like autism, according to a July 21 study
in Pediatrics.
Two-hundred
and forty-three mothers—65 per cent with children with autism and the rest with
other developmental disabilities—were randomized into either a
Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction group using breathing exercises or a
positive psychology group that focuses on cognitive exercises like curbing negative
thoughts and practising gratitude.
Six weekly,
90-minute sessions were run by mothers of children with disabilities. They
received four months of training and were supervised.
At
baseline, 85 per cent of participants had significantly high stress, almost
half were clinically depressed and 41 per cent had anxiety disorders.
Both
treatments led to significant reductions in stress, depression and anxiety and
improved sleep and life satisfaction. The drops in depression and anxiety were
large. Mothers in the mindfulness group had greater improvements than those in
the positive psychology group. Only one treatment difference was seen in the disability
groups: Mothers of children with autism improved less in anxiety. Mothers
continued to improve or maintain gains during a six-month follow-up.
Researchers
suggest that further research should look at groups that incorporate aspects of
both mindfulness and positive psychology.
“Our
research and findings from others labs indicate that many mothers of children with disabilities have a
blunted cortisol response, indicative of chronic stress,” says lead
investigator Elizabeth Dykens, director of the Vanderbilt Kennedy Center for Research
on Human Development and professor of psychology. They also have reduced immune
function and shorter telomeres—the protective cap on the ends of
strands of DNA—which indicates speeded up cellular aging.
“Compared
with mothers of typically developing children, mothers of children with
neurodevelopmental disabilities experience more stress, psychiatric problems
and poorer health,” the researchers say. Although the “cumulative stress and
disease burden of these mothers is exceptionally high…policies and practices
primarily serve the identified child with disabilities.”
The
researchers call for more research on how trained peer mentors can work with
professionals to address unmet mental health needs of mothers of children with
developmental disabilities.
1 comments:
This is so interesting! It's an area of research that NeuroDevNet has funded.
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