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      A systematic review of the benefits of mindfulness-based interventions following transient ischemic attack and stroke.

      International Journal of Stroke
      Humans, Ischemic Attack, Transient, psychology, Mindfulness, Secondary Prevention, methods, Stress, Psychological, prevention & control, Stroke

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          Abstract

          Recent epidemiological studies have demonstrated an association between perceived psychological stress and ischemic stroke. A feature of stroke is recurrence; 30-40% within five-years following first transient ischemic attack/stroke. Equipping patients with skills and coping strategies to help reduce or manage perceived psychological stress may represent an important secondary prevention intervention. Mindfulness-based interventions are structured, group-based self-management programmes with potential to help people with long-term conditions cope better with physical, psychological, or emotional distress. Review evidence suggests significant benefits across a range of physical and mental health problems. However, we could find no evidence synthesis relating specifically to the benefits of mindfulness-based interventions following transient ischemic attack/stroke. The review aims to evaluate the benefits of mindfulness-based interventions following transient ischemic attack/stroke. Six major databases were searched using subject headings and key words. Papers were screened using review-specific criteria. Critical appraisal and data extraction were conducted independently by two reviewers. Statistical meta-analysis was not possible; therefore findings are presented in narrative form. Four studies involving 160 participants were reviewed. Three papers reported mindfulness-based interventions delivered to groups; one paper reported a mindfulness-based intervention which was delivered one to one. The results demonstrate a positive trend in favor of the benefits of mindfulness-based interventions across a range of psychological, physiological, and psychosocial outcomes including anxiety, depression, mental fatigue, blood pressure, perceived health, and quality of life. No evidence of harm was found. Following transient ischemic attack/stroke, people may derive a range of benefits from mindfulness-based interventions; however, further methodologically robust trials are required. © 2013 The Authors. International Journal of Stroke © 2013 World Stroke Organization.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          23879751
          10.1111/ijs.12135

          Chemistry
          Humans,Ischemic Attack, Transient,psychology,Mindfulness,Secondary Prevention,methods,Stress, Psychological,prevention & control,Stroke

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