Mindfulness
Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT),
and Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction (MBSR)
are methods of
therapy which blend features of two disciplines:
Dr. Jim Roche, a Registered
Psychologist with an Advanced Certificate in Cognitive Therapy from
the Albert Ellis Institute in New York introduces our clients to
cognitive therapy. Mr. Kai-Lin
Yang, MA, a Registered Clinical Counsellor and graduate of the
California Institute for Integral Studies teaches clients mindfulness
and mediation techniques. Mr. Yang has spent many years studying
Buddhism, Buddhist Meditation and Gestalt Therapy. After initial sessions with both clinicians
individuals work with a therapist of their choice.
In MBCT/MBSR, the patient is invited
to recognize and accept feelings as they come and go instead of trying
to push them away. Traditional
cognitive therapy, or
cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), focuses on changing
negative content of thoughts while MBCT/MBSR emphasizes the process
of paying attention to thoughts and feelings moment by moment and
without judgment. Changing the patient's relationship to the suffering
caused by negative thoughts is the key because there is no possible
way to alleviate all suffering. No therapy or meditation will prevent
unpleasant things from happening in our daily lives but the two
practices combined may provide more objectivity from which to view
these unpleasant things.
MBCT's main technique is based
on the
Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) eight week program,
developed by
Jon Kabat-Zinn in 1979 at the
University of Massachusetts Medical Center. Research shows that
MBSR is enormously empowering for patients with
chronic pain,
hypertension,
heart disease,
cancer,
and
gastrointestinal disorders, as well as for psychological problems
such as anxiety and panic. People often misunderstand the goal of
therapy and especially mindfulness. Relaxation and happiness are not
the aim, but rather a "freedom from the tendency to get drawn into
automatic reactions to thoughts, feelings, and events" .[1]
Patients change the relationship to chronic pain so the pain becomes
more manageable.
Mindfulness-Based Cognitive
Therapy grew largely from Jon Kabat-Zinn's work.
Zindel V. Segal,
J. Mark G. Williams and
John D. Teasdale helped adapt the MBSR program so it could be used
with people who had suffered repeated bouts of depression in their
lives. Currently, MBCT programs usually consist of eight-weekly two
hour classes with weekly assignments to be done outside of session.
The aim of this program is to enhance awareness so we are able to
respond to things instead of react to them. "We can respond to
situations with choice rather than reacting automatically. We do that
by practicing to become more aware of where our attention is, and
deliberately changing the focus of attention, over and over again".[2]
The structure of MBCT requires strong commitment and work on the
clients' part but the rewards can be lasting. Patients participating
in the program meet as a group on a weekly basis. The Mindful Way
Through Depression is used as the patient manual for the program
and contains guided Mindfulness practices on CD that are assigned as
homework.[3]
Effectiveness of MBCT and MBSR
Research is now showing the
effectiveness of mindfulness in the prevention of relapse. The UK
National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) has
recently endorsed MBCT as an effective treatment for prevention of
relapse. Research has shown that people who have been clinically
depressed three or more times (sometimes for twenty years or more)
find that taking the program and learning these skills helps to reduce
considerably their chances that depression will return. In a study
conducted with 145 participants, all the patients had previously
recovered from depression and then relapsed. These sufferers were
split randomly into groups providing different methods of treatment.
Within a year, patients who were undergoing MBCT "reduced relapse from
66% (control group) to 37% (treatment group)".[4]
"Whereas most people might be able to ignore sad mood, in previously
depressed persons a slight lowering of mood might bring about a
potentially devastating change in thought patterns".[5]
The core skill of MBCT is to teach the ideas of recognizing these
thought patterns in order to break away from the false constructs of
our mind. Relapse is avoided because the onset of depression is
recognized before it has fully developed. The vicious cycle is stopped
before it even gets started.
Benefits of MBCT, MBSR and mindfulness practice
Mindfulness meditation is a
useful tool in dealing with many different scenarios. Practicing
mindfulness aids patients, laypersons, and therapists. This approach
to meditation focuses our attention back to the present, to what is
happening right now in this exact moment. When one is mindful, the
attention is focused on the present so judgment cannot be placed.
Often, our pain and mental discomfort are caused by the judgment
placed on the present moment and not by what is actually happening.
This judgment and negative thinking is what can possibly lead to
depression. MBCT prioritizes learning how to pay attention or
concentrate with purpose, in each moment and most importantly, without
judgment.[6]
Segal and his partners found
that "thoughts and feelings could interact with each other in a
damaging, vicious spiral".[1]
Through the practice of mindfulness, we recognize that holding onto
some of these feelings is ineffective and mentally destructive.
Viewing things mindfully requires not turning away from any feeling
but instead being open to the experience while trying not to engage
defense mechanisms. All thoughts are welcomed into the mind equally so
that one does not judge the thought or the self for thinking the
thought. Gaining perspective on one's own thoughts allows us to escape
the mental grooves and ruminative thinking that plagues us. Through
mindfulness practice the spiral of negative thought is stopped before
one finds herself at the bottom looking up.
Not only is this practice
helpful to laypersons but to the actual therapist doing this type of
MBCT. As a therapist, mindfulness can be implemented into therapy
sessions, and used as a means of self-care in the therapist's personal
life. "Meditating therapists often report feeling more 'present',
relaxed, and receptive with their patients if they meditate earlier in
the day".[7]
Mindfulness incorporates not judging thought. By having that
non-judgment, the therapist allows the patient to fully express true
feelings by having that openness. "As the therapist learns to
disentangle from her own conditioned patterns of thoughts that arise
in the therapy relationship, the patient may discover the same
emotional freedom".[6]
The concentration development from mindfulness also helps the
therapist be able to stay fully engaged with the patient. The mind
naturally wanders to other things but mindfulness is the answer to
being unfocused. There is a degree of perspective that also comes with
mindfulness meditation. This new perspective allows a therapist to see
other solutions or options to a patient's problem he or she may not
have been originally aware of. "Having this [perspective] enables the
therapist to have some flexibility in finding a formulation that
accords with the patient's understanding".[6]
As therapists help their patients come to these solutions and become
more fully functioning, it may be easy to think they are powerful and
all knowing. Maintaining perspective prevents therapists from 'buying
their own press'.
As means of self-care, P. Fulton
and his fellow authors would say "offering love and care to ourselves
replenishes the physical and emotional reservoirs that are necessary
to care for others" (p. 87). When looking at burn-out rates in the
social service fields, one can see that self-care is absolutely
necessary whether one thinks they need it or not. Meditating saturates
these reservoirs so that compassionate, sincere work can continue.
Also by dealing with personal suffering through this practice,
therapists develop greater empathy and become more openhearted to the
needs of their clients.
Depression as the inspiration of MBCT and MBSR
Depression is a more serious
problem than is often supposed. The
World Health Organization (WHO) conducted a study and came up with
the following projection for the year 2020: "of all diseases,
depression will impose the second largest burden of ill health
worldwide".[1]
Research shows that at any given time, ten percent of the United
States has experienced this type of clinical depression in the last
year alone.[1]
Women are affected at a significantly higher rate (20-25%) than men
(7-12%).[1]
The people who are affected with this common mental disorder are also
the least likely to get help or treatment.
Depression is a severe and
prolonged state of mind in which normal sadness grows into a painful
state of hopelessness, listlessness, lack of motivation, and fatigue.
Depression can vary from mild to severe. When depression is mild, we
may find ourselves brooding on negative aspects of ourselves or
others. We may feel resentful, irritable or angry much of the time,
feeling sorry for ourselves, and needing reassurance from someone.
Various physical ailments can also occur that have no relation to
physical illness.
Depression is classified as
clinical when the episode inhibits a person's ability to accomplish
routine daily tasks for at least two weeks. If suddenly 'normal'
activities become difficult to do or the interest to do them is lost
completely for a sustained amount of time, clinical depression could
be a possibility. A change in basic bodily functions may also be
experienced. The usual daily rhythms seem to go 'out of kilter'. One
can't sleep, or one sleeps too much. One can't eat, or one eats too
much. Others may notice that the sufferer may become agitated or
slowed down. One may find that required energy for activities that
used to be enjoyed is now gone. He or she may even feel that life is
not worth living, and begin to develop thoughts that he or she would
be better off dead.
Currently the most commonly used
treatment for major depression is antidepressant medication. These
medications are relatively cheap, and easy for family practitioners
(who treat the majority of depressed people) to prescribe. However,
once the episode has passed, and the client has stopped taking the
antidepressants, depression tends to return, and at least 50% of those
experiencing their first episode of depression find that depression
comes back, despite appearing to have made a full recovery. After a
second or third episode, the risk of recurrence rises to between 80%
and 90%. Also, those who first became depressed before 20 years of age
are particularly likely to suffer a higher risk of relapse and
recurrence.
The main method for preventing
this recurrence is the continuation of the medication, but many people
do not want to stay on medication for indefinite periods, and when the
medication stops, the risk of becoming depressed again returns. People
are turning to new ways of helping them stay well after depression. To
see what it is most helpful to do, we need to understand why it is
that we may remain at high risk, even when we've recovered.
Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy can be used as a complementary
method for treating chronic recurrent depression.
Why
do we remain vulnerable to depression?
New research shows that during
any episode of depression, negative mood occurs alongside negative
thinking (such as 'I am a failure', 'I am inadequate, 'I am
worthless') and bodily sensations of sluggishness and fatigue. When
the episode is past, and the mood has returned to normal, the negative
thinking and fatigue tend to disappear as well. However, during the
episode an association has formed between the mood that was present at
that time, and the negative thinking patterns.
This means that when negative
mood happens again (for any reason) a relatively small amount of such
mood can trigger or reactivate the old thinking pattern. Once again,
people start to think they have failed, or are inadequate - even if it
is not relevant to the current situation. People who believed they had
recovered may find themselves feeling 'back to square one'. They end
up inside a rumination loop that constantly asks 'what has gone
wrong?', 'why is this happening to me?', 'where will it all end?' Such
rumination feels as if it ought to help find an answer, but it only
succeeds in prolonging and deepening the mood spiral. When this
happens, the old habits of negative thinking will start up again,
negative thinking gets into the same rut, and a full-blown episode of
depression may be the result.
The discovery that, even when
people feel well, the link between negative moods and negative
thoughts remains ready to be re-activated, is of enormous importance.
It means that sustaining recovery from such depression depends on
learning how to keep mild states of depression from spiralling out of
control.
Future of MBCT
Further research is being
conducted to identify all the different uses of MBCT. Significant
decreases in anxiety, depression, with a resulting increased sense
well being, have been found so far. Research being conducted will
evaluate MBCT as a useful technique with patients who are diagnosed
with cancer or haematological illness. Mindfulness practice is being
done over various cultures and demographics.
Ellen Langer has been focusing on the future of mindfulness.[8]
See
also
References
-
^
a
b
c
d
e
Segal, Z., Teasdale, J., Williams, M. (2002). Mindfulness-Based
Cognitive Therapy for Depression. New York: Guilford Press.
-
^
(Segal, et al., 2002, p. 122)
-
^
(Williams M. Teasdale J. Segal Z. & Kabat-Zinn J. (2007)
The Mindful Way Through Depression. New York: Guilford
Press.)
-
^
Centre for Mindfulness Research
-
^
(Segal, et al., 2002, p.29)
-
^
a
b
c
Fulton, P., Germer, C., Siegel, R. (2005). Mindfulness and
Psychotherapy. New York: Guilford Press.
-
^
(Fulton, Germer, Siegel, 2005, p.18)
-
^
Ellen Langer & Mihnea Moldoveanu,
Mindfulness Research and the Future
Links