Autor: |
Hunt, Carly A., Goodman, Rachael D., Hilert, Alexander J., Hurley, Wilson, Hill, Clara E. |
Předmět: |
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Zdroj: |
Counselling Psychology Quarterly; Sep2022, Vol. 35 Issue 3, p546-561, 16p, 2 Charts |
Abstrakt: |
We investigated the impact of a 1.5 hr workshop based on mindfulness-based compassion practices (MBCP) for 6 doctoral student therapists, followed by these therapists engaging in pre-session preparation for each of their clients in one of 3 randomly assigned conditions (MBCP, self-supervision, preparation-as-usual) over a 1-month period. State mindfulness and meditation self-efficacy increased following the workshop. Therapist ratings of session effectiveness were higher following pre-session meditation relative to preparation-as-usual, although there were no client-rated differences in session outcome. In a focus group, therapists reported that the workshop was generally helpful, and noted that pre-session MBCP led to a positive state of being and increased self-care. However, they felt rushed to fit in the exercises and some doubted their meditation self-efficacy. They suggested that longer, at-home practice might be more beneficial than pre-session exercises. We encourage replication in larger samples varying the amount and format of meditation training for improving outcomes. Practical Implications Therapist engagement in 2 minutes of meditation immediately prior to sessions may support therapy effectiveness Brief meditation provides an opportunity for therapists to engage in self-care and grow positive inner states Therapists who implement pre-session meditation may encounter challenges, such as tiredness and difficulty fitting in meditation between therapy sessions [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: |
Complementary Index |
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