A number of issues important to the clinical utility of mindfulness require systematic study. These include the most parsimonious definition of mindfulness for clinical purposes, how mindfulness is best described to be most approachable to patients, and the extent to which mindfulness shares common mechanisms with other mind-body programs. The discussion includes a brief review of the transition of mindfulness from traditional into clinical settings as well as the components commonly contained within clinical descriptions of mindfulness. A model based on facility in the use of attention is proposed, and a description of mechanisms by which attentional skill may lead to the recognition of internal associational processes and account for psychological outcomes is given. Using constructs already familiar to patients, an attention-based conception may also be more accessible to patients than more elaborate descriptions and have greater utility in identifying commonalities that mindfulness training may have with other mind-body programs.
Evolving Conceptions of Mindfulness in Clinical Settings
Journal of Cognitive Psychotherapy
Format:
Journal Article
Publication Year:
2009
Pages:
270-280
Sources ID:
21590
Visibility:
Private
Zotero Collections:
Cultural Belief Contexts, Environmental Context, Contemplation by Applied Subject, Health Care and Contemplation
Abstract:
(Show)
Zotero Collections
Subjects:
Health Care and Contemplation
Cultural Belief Contexts
Environmental Context
Contemplation by Applied Subject