Meditation has entered the mainstream of health care as a method of stress and pain
reduction. As a method of stress reduction, meditation has been used in
hospitals in cases of chronic or terminal illness to reduce
complications associated with increased stress that include depressed immune systems.
There is growing agreement in the medical community that mental factors
such as stress significantly contribute to a lack of physical health,
and there is a growing movement in mainstream science to fund research
in this area. There are now several mainstream health care programs
which aid those, both sick and healthy, in promoting their inner well-being, especially mindfulness-based programs such as Mindfulness-based Stress Reduction (MBSR).
A 2003 meta-analysis
found that mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR), which involves
continuous awareness of consciousness, without seeking to censor
thoughts, concluded that the form of meditation may be broadly useful
for individuals attempting to cope with clinical and nonclinical
problems. Diagnoses for which MBSR was found to be helpful included chronic pain, fibromyalgia, cancer patients and coronary artery disease. Improvements were noted for both physical and mental health measures.
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