Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy MBCT
Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy MBCT
Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy MBCT
May 2012
Acknowledgements
These implementation resources were gathered and edited by Prof Willem Kuyken (Exeter
University), Rebecca Crane (Bangor University) and Prof Mark Williams (Oxford
University) from materials developed at the mindfulness centres at Exeter, Bangor and
Oxford Universities.
The materials have been developed at Exeter by Willem Kuyken, Alison Evans, Claire
Brejcha, Lynne Holmes and Jenny Wilks; at Bangor by Rebecca Crane, Jody Mardula, Judith
Soulsby, Sarah Silverton and Trish Bartley; and at Oxford University by Mark Williams,
Maret Dymond, Melanie Fennell, Marie Johansson and Christina Suraway.
2
Contents
1.
Introduction
.......................................................................................................................................
4
2.
Setting
up
MBCT
groups
and/or
an
MBCT
service
.............................................................................
6
2.1
Implementation
of
Mindfulness-‐Based
Cognitive
Therapy
in
the
UK
Health
Service
................
6
2.2
Bangor
–
Exeter
–
Oxford
Guiding
Principles
for
MBCT
.............................................................
6
2.3
Conducting
an
analysis
of
local
context
for
MBCT
implementation
........................................
11
3.1.
Summary
of
current
and
emerging
evidence
for
MBCT
..........................................................
13
3.2
Participant
care
pathways
.......................................................................................................
15
3.3
MBCT
service
protocols
...........................................................................................................
16
3.4
Sample
information
for
referrers
to
MBCT
courses
................................................................
18
3.5.
Inclusion
and
exclusion
criteria
...............................................................................................
19
3.6
Considerations
in
assessing
the
safety
&
suitability
of
mindfulness-‐
based
courses
for
participants
with
substantial
problems
...................................................................................
22
3.7
Participant
assessment
and
orientation
..................................................................................
30
3.8
Session
plans
............................................................................................................................
49
3.9
MBCT
Participant
Handouts
.....................................................................................................
56
3.10
Preparing
to
teach
an
MBCT
class
-‐
guidance
for
teachers
......................................................
67
3.11
Post
class
follow-‐up
tasks
and
processes
-‐
guidance
for
teachers
..........................................
67
3.12
Guided
mindfulness
CDs
and
the
video
/
DVD
required
for
sessions
4
and
5
.........................
68
3.13
Sample
risk
protocol
for
MBCT
participants
............................................................................
69
4.
MBCT
course
reunions
.............................................................................................................
73
4.1
Different
formats
for
MBCT
class
reunions
.............................................................................
73
4.2
Example
Session
Plan
for
MBCT
Reunion
................................................................................
74
4.3
Example
Invitation
to
MBCT
Reunion
......................................................................................
75
5.
Training
and
supervision
..........................................................................................................
76
5.1
Good
Practice
Guidance
for
mindfulness-‐based
teachers
.......................................................
76
5.2
Good
Practice
Guidelines
for
Trainers
of
Mindfulness-‐Based
Teachers
..................................
80
5.3
Supervision
of
MBCT
teachers
.................................................................................................
82
5.4
Article
on
training
for
mindfulness-‐based
teachers
.................................................................
84
5.5
MBCT
teacher
training
routes
..................................................................................................
85
5.6
Article
on
mindfulness-‐based
teaching
competency
...............................................................
88
5.7
Mindfulness-‐Based
Interventions:
Teaching
Assessment
Criteria
...........................................
89
6.
Evaluation
of
MBCT
Courses
....................................................................................................
90
7.
Further
resources
..................................................................................................................
101
3
1. Introduction1
Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) was developed as a psychological approach
for people at risk for depressive relapse who wish to learn how to stay well in the long-term.
It is described in the manual “Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy for depression: A new
approach to preventing relapse” published by Guilford Press in 2002. In recent years MBCT
has evolved to be more widely accessible to a range of populations (e.g., Williams and
Penman, 2011). This publication provides some key resources that MBCT teachers need to
set up an MBCT service, run MBCT courses and evaluate their work.
The original MBCT manual published in 2002 had a clear focus on preventing depressive
relapse. It was based on a theoretical account of cognitive reactivity and depression and has
acquired a robust evidence base (Segal, Williams and Teasdale, 2002). The situation is now
developing rapidly. For example:
• Many NHS mental health services are beginning to offer MBCT within their care
pathways;
1
This introduction is based in part on an Editorial: Williams, J.M.G. & Kuyken, W. (2012).
Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy: A promising new approach to preventing depressive relapse. British
Journal of Psychiatry, 200, 359-360. doi: 10.1192/bjp.bp.111.104745.
4
• The Mental Health Foundation issued a report in 2010 advocating steps to improve
the accessibility of MBCT;
• There are now 3 training programmes in the UK at the Universities of Bangor, Exeter
and Oxford, and numerous related training initiatives, for example through
Breathworks;
• MBCT has taken root in North America, Germany, the Benelux counties, Scandinavia
and Australia;
• Mark Williams and colleagues have increased the accessibility of MBCT by
producing a self-help manual that helps people with depression to learn mindfulness
for themselves (Williams, Teasdale, Segal, and Kabat-Zinn, 2007), and setting out a
psychological account of human stress and how MBCT can enhance people’s
resilience (Mindfulness: A Practical Guide to Finding Peace in a Frantic World,
Williams and Penman, 2011).
Further large scale clinical trials are now underway, designed to address outstanding
questions concerning MBCT’s efficacy, mechanisms and acceptability, particularly in
relation to the treatment most commonly offered to patients with depression:
maintenance antidepressants. Future research needs to interpret research findings
suggesting that MBCT is effective only for those with 3 or more prior episodes of
depression, and to assess its broader acceptability in real world settings. In the last ten
years, theory development and treatment research has extended to people with chronic
fatigue, current depression, bipolar disorder, health anxiety, parenting stress and
suicidality. Outstanding challenges will be examining the translational gap from efficacy
to implementation in the NHS, training sufficient numbers of skilled and adequately
trained MBCT therapists, and consolidating and extending the evidence base for
innovative applications of MBCT.
5
2. Setting up MBCT groups and/or an MBCT service
2.1 Implementation of Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy in the UK Health Service
The article below presents the results of a survey of UK MBCT teachers and stake holders
conducted during 2011; and reports the outcomes of a workshop on MBCT Implementation
offered at the Mindfulness Now conference in Bangor University in 2011 led by Willem Kuyken
and Rebecca Crane.
The grid below outlines some guiding principles for MBCT implementation. They are drawn
from workshop participants reporting on both the barriers and facilitators to local MBCT
implementation gathered at a workshop on implementation at the Mindfulness Now conference at
Bangor University 2011.
The Nutely et al. (2007) framework for structuring these recommendations is used because it
evidenced-based practice flourishing in local circumstances. Nutely et al. (2007) outline eight
areas that need thinking through when implementing new evidence: translating research into
6
analysis, ensuring credibility, providing leadership, giving adequate support and developing
integration.
services. Typically this involves - Base decisions on definitive and emerging evidence for
consensus development at a local - Consider and map out how the new MBCT service will
approaches that ‘force’ research - Develop local networks for interested clinicians and
affect uptake.
- People who are enthusiastic about knowledge and access to key networks.
the issue/topic/practice can act as - Champions are needed both within the organisation and
compelling advocates.
7
implementation prior to designing - Set up an implementation steering group to
the strategy can facilitate a systematically address local barriers and facilitators in
particularized approach through the range of challenge areas, to develop and oversee the
the targeting of local barriers and new service until it is fully embedded.
facilitators.
- Research use is enhanced by MBCT (e.g. 2009 NICE Depression Guidelines and
project and organizational level - Leadership is needed on a strategic and a clinical level.
can lend strategic support and - Strategic leaders within the organization’s management
MBCT.
mentoring.
Provide adequate support/resources - Identify appropriate and adequately trained staff to run
- Implementation needs adequate MBCT courses who at minimum meet the UK good
8
financial, human (dedicated - Using epidemiological data, it is estimated that a
project leaders) and appropriate population of 200,000 would need 2 full-time MBCT
will be required.
orientation of participants.
blankets) is available.
Develop opportunities for integration - Integrate MBCT implementation strategy with local and
9
into the organization’s systems - Identify appropriate imperatives for MBCT, such as the
and processes to enhance their NICE depression guidance, health economic data or
with strategic priorities are more - Establish a service pathway from referral through to
Note. Based on Nutely’s (2007) synthesis of factors that shape evidence use in public services
10
2.3 Conducting an analysis of local context for MBCT
implementation
One of the principles highlighted in the table above is the importance of conducting an analysis of local context.
This can facilitate a particularized approach to implementation through the targeting of local barriers and
facilitators. It is suggested that an implementation steering group is set up whose initial task will be to identify
and systematically address specific local barriers and facilitators in the range of challenge areas and whose
ongoing function is the development an oversight of the new service until it is fully embedded in service
frameworks.
The following table offers a structure and checklist for identifying implementation barriers and facilitators in a
range of areas influencing implementation.
11
3. Running an MBCT service
3.11 Post class follow-up tasks and processes - guidance for teachers
3.12 Guided mindfulness CDs and the video / DVD required for sessions 4 and 5
12
3.1. Summary of current and emerging evidence for MBCT
It is helpful for MBCT teachers to be familiar with the current and emerging evidence for MBCT in
terms of:
3. Cost-effectiveness, are the effects we see through MBCT comparable or preferable in cost terms
to alternative treatments?
The research literature is expanding rapidly and MBCT teachers might usefully use search engines
such as Google Scholar to look for any evidence directly relevant to their work. There is a useful
compendium of evidence at the Mindfulness Research Guide which is updated regularly: See
http://www.mindfulexperience.org/
In the 10 years since the publication of the MBCT manual, research has primarily been
focussed on addressing MBCT’s effectiveness. Data from 6 randomized controlled trials
(N=593) indicate that MBCT is associated with a 44% reduction in depressive relapse risk
compared with usual care for patients with three or more previous episodes. In head-to head
comparisons with antidepressants, MBCT provides effects comparable to staying on a
maintenance dose of antidepressants (See Piet and Hougaard, 2011). For people looking for a
psychosocial approach to staying well, MBCT appears to be accessible, acceptable and cost-
effective. Based on this evidence, the National Institute for Clinical Excellence 2009
Depression Guideline recommended MBCT for people who are currently well but have
experienced 3 or more episodes of depression.
Even though we know that MBCT works, it does not necessarily follow that it works through
its hypothesized mechanism. Understanding mechanisms can help therapists and treatment
developers improve MBCT’s outcomes by emphasizing key processes.
This literature is growing exponentially, is complex and draws on different research areas and
methodologies. It is beyond the scope of this resource kit to review this evidence but what is
encouraging is that several key studies suggest that MBCT for recurrent depression and
MBSR for chronic physical health problems do indeed change the processes they intend to
and that changes in these processes are associated with changes in outcomes. For example,
research embedded in one trial comparing MBCT with maintenance antidepressants showed
that MBCT cultivates both mindfulness and self-compassion, and changes in mindfulness and
compassion explained the changes in depressive symptoms 15 months later (Kuyken et al.,
2010). Crucially, when people are able to be more self-compassionate at times of low mood,
13
this breaks the link between reactivity and poorer outcomes a year later. This provides
promising evidence that MBCT is indeed working through its hypothesized mechanism.
While this publication is focused on MBCT we include one study of MBSR because it
similarly demonstrates that MBSR may work through its hypothesized mechanism (Nyklicek
& Kuijpers, 2008). Sixty people were enrolled in a comparison of MBSR with a wait-list
control, completing measures of mindfulness, stress, psychological well-being and quality of
life before and after the intervention. Mindfulness training was associated with greater
changes in mindfulness, perceived stress and quality of life than the wait-list control, and
when changes in mindfulness were added as a co-variate the changes in perceived stress and
quality of life were reduced to non-significance. This provides preliminary evidence that
when people learn mindfulness through an 8-week mindfulness program, the change in
mindfulness can explain changes in stress and quality of life.
Is MBCT cost-effective?
Any intervention that can prevent depressive relapse is likely to reduce the overall prevalence
of depression and save the substantial costs involved with depressive relapses. MBCT was
developed as a group-based intervention in part to maximise its cost-effectiveness by
ensuring one MBCT teacher could treat 8-15 patients over 8 weeks. Given MBCT’s
demonstrated efficacy, it is likely therefore that it would be a more cost-effective relapse
prevention approach than individual therapy. NICE has recommended MBCT as a relapse
prevention approach for recurrent depression on the basis that it meets NICE thresholds for
cost effectiveness. Early research in this area comparing MBCT with maintenance-
antidepressants suggests no significant differences in cost-effectiveness over a 15 month
follow-up period (Kuyken et al., 2008). Further research is needed in this important area.
Nonetheless, given that MBCT is a relatively brief one off group-delivered intervention
intended to teach long-term resilience, there is a good chance it will prove to be more cost-
effective than either individual therapy or longer-term relapse prevention approaches.
14
3.2 Participant care pathways
It is important to consider how an MBCT service sits within the local care pathway so that
MBCT is integrated with other services. Recurrent depression is typically a serious and long-
term condition and people will require, at minimum, ongoing monitoring in primary care and
possibly secondary care or indeed tertiary care input at phases in their lives.
In the UK, NICE has published care pathways based on NICE guidance and the weblink is
given below.
NICE sets a full pathway for the care of people with depression
http://pathways.nice.org.uk/pathways/depression/care-for-adults-with-depression. This
identifies MBCT at Step 3 “Persistent sub-threshold depressive symptoms or mild to
moderate depression with inadequate response to initial interventions, and moderate and
severe depression.” Within Step 3 it is identified as a relapse prevention programme for
people with 3 or more previous episodes. The 2009 NICE guidance states:
“Provide mindfulness-based cognitive therapy for people who are currently well but have
had 3 or more episodes of depression. Deliver in groups of 8–15 people in weekly 2-
hour meetings over 8 weeks. Also offer 4 follow-up sessions in the next 12 months.”
It is important to note that to date it is not recommended in other NICE guidance or NICE
care pathways (for example anxiety disorders or long-term medical conditions) because we
have not yet accumulated sufficient data from UK based randomised controlled trials. This
picture may well change.
15
3.3 MBCT service protocols
It is good clinical practice to have a protocol for a service that sets out how it operates so that
anyone involved with the service has an understanding of the service and to safeguard good
governance. This is especially important for services involving more than one person.
The orientation appointment lasts for 45-60 minutes. It is an opportunity for the therapist to
explore with the patient any triggers, patterns and early warning signs of depression and what
has helped so far (this forms part of the work patients undertake in the latter part of the
course.) The other main part of this session is to inform the patient about the group, reunions,
home practice and answer any questions.
A final decision about them attending is usually made in collaboration at the end of this
appointment. The alternative options are discharge, referral to another treatment option
within the clinic, referral to another service or awaiting the next MBCT course.
If a patient is assessed as suitable for MBCT at orientation but cannot attend the next course,
a place will be offered on the following course. If this is declined the patient will be
discharged and need to be re-referred unless there are special circumstances.
If a patient is not suitable for MBCT at the time of orientation the therapist may choose to
offer an orientation for the next group. If the patient is still not suitable they will be
discharged or offered another treatment within the clinic.
The course runs for 8 weeks plus a reunion session in the latter part of the course. Patients are
encouraged to attend all 8 sessions. If they know in advance that they cannot attend they can
let the therapist know and handouts can be given so they can keep up with the home practice.
If they cannot make a session unexpectedly patients are asked to phone or email. The
therapist will post on relevant handouts/CDs. There will be times that the therapist will make
contact with the patient by telephone. An obvious example would be if there was any concern
about the patient’s mood. Other examples might be if a patient DNAs, or cancels twice in a
16
row or seems to be struggling with the practice. The therapist uses their own discretion and
records these calls in the notes.
Patients receive a handout at each session and a set of 4 CDs over the course. They are asked
to practice initially with the use of a CD every day. They complete a home practice record
sheet that they are invited to hand in. Over the course of the week the therapist reads it,
makes notes and returns it to the patient the following week. After session 4 patients have the
option of borrowing a Mindfulness book until the end of the course (The Mindful Way
Through Depression).
After session 7 patients are given an evaluation form and the final sets of questionnaires to
complete and bring back to session 8. A copy of this evaluation goes in their notes.
Throughout the course the therapist keeps notes after each session about individuals including
information on attendance, interaction and home practice. On discharge these notes are put in
the patient’s file.
There are no hard and fast rules about how many cancellations a patient makes before the
therapist decides to formally discharge them from the clinic. The therapist will use their
judgement. It is difficult if a patient misses more than 2/3 sessions for them to keep up with
the programme. If this happens a patient might be offered a place on the next course if it is
appropriate.
The reunion sessions are open to current MBCT participants and previous participants. We
hold approximately 4 each year. If patients do not attend 5 in a row or send apologies their
name is removed from the database. The structure of the reunions is around some
mindfulness practice with dialogue afterwards and some opportunity for sharing around a
theme. There is a mixture of pair work, small group work and large group work, finishing
with a more informal tea/coffee slot.
Most of the MBCT groups have 2 interns. These are often staff members from within the
University or NHS or other interested professionals who have the opportunity to come to the
group and learn by being a participant. Patients are informed about interns at orientation. For
the most part interns become group members but are asked to pair together for introductions
and any pair work around depression.
Sometimes the MBCT groups are offered as a placement to supervisors or students on the
post graduate course as part of their development and training. The MBCT therapist would
co-run with them, preparing together beforehand, writing up notes at the end and offering
supervision. Patients are informed at orientation and where possible both would be present at
orientation.
Most MBCT groups are videotaped providing the whole group has given consent; this is
primarily for the therapist to reflect on their work and for supervision. Extracts from these
sessions might be used for teaching on the course if consent is given. The DVDs are kept in a
locked cabinet in the clinic office.
17
3.4 Sample information for referrers to MBCT courses
Referrers and people seeking referral to MBCT services need good quality information to make
decisions about who and when to refer. It takes time, sometimes a few years, to work with a
network of referrers to develop a shared understanding of MBCT, the care pathway, and when
MBCT is appropriate.
There are good websites and links (See Section 7, Resources, below).
Some sample information for referrers and potential MBCT participants is reproduced below.
Sample websites with downloadable information leaflets for GPs and patients can be found
at:
http://www.exeter-mindfulness-network.org/
The BeMindful website is an excellent resource for referrers and potential participants,
including first hand accounts of people who have participated in MBCT courses -
http://www.bemindful.co.uk/
18
3.5. Inclusion and exclusion criteria
MBCT was informed by a clear and evidence-based theory of depressive relapse and a coherent
account of why mindfulness training and cognitive-behavioural techniques might help prevent
depressive relapse. In brief, for people at risk for depressive relapse dips in mood can trigger
emotional and cognitive reactivity that can easily spiral into depression. MBCT teaches people to
become aware and respond to these mood and cognitive changes in new ways that nip early signs
of depressive relapse in the bud. The first two randomized controlled trials suggested that MBCT
was only effective for people who had experienced 3 or more episodes. On this basis NICE
recommended MBCT for people who are currently well but have had 3 or more episodes of
depression. Sample inclusion and exclusion criteria are set out below for an MBCT for recurrent
depression service.
While there are many innovative mindfulness-based applications for a variety of populations and
presentations, it is important to answer several questions when establishing inclusion and exclusion
criteria for a service.
1. What is the theoretical rationale for offering MBCT to this group of people with this set of
presentations? How exactly is MBCT relevant to the particular problems that trouble them, and
how would I expect them to make use of it?
2. How would I know that people are benefiting in the way I hope? How can I evaluate my MBCT
courses to be able to demonstrate these benefits? (See Section 6 below.)
3. Are there any potential risks? Might I do harm? If so, how do I assess and manage this risk?
In full or partial remission from depression MBCT is designed for clients who are not currently
experiencing depression. It is a relapse prevention
programme for people who are currently in full or
19
partial remission.
Committed and motivated to undertake the The MBCT programme requires that people attend 2-
MBCT programme 2.5 hour sessions for 8 weeks, as well as finding up
to an hour a day for mindfulness practice and other
homework. This is a big commitment and it is
important to establish that potential participants can
make this commitment prior to starting the group.
Exclusion criteria
Current substance dependence Substance dependence would make it difficult for the
person to engage in MBCT. While mindfulness
interventions are used with people with substance
dependence problems, they are bespoke to the needs
of this group to be able to bring awareness to thoughts
and feelings without resorting to substances to avoid
unpleasant experience. MBCT is training in awareness
and substance dependence is often about
mindlessness. It is usually wise for someone to seek
help with his or her substance dependence before
undertaking MBCT.
Organic brain damage This would also normally make it difficult for the
person to engage in the therapy because of cognitive
disabilities required to make use of the un-adapted
MBCT programme.
20
Current or past psychosis, including bipolar MBCT for depressive relapse targets particular
disorder mechanisms thought to underpin recurrent depression
and these are likely different from the mechanisms
that underpin psychosis and bipolar disorder.
However, there are clinical-research groups
developing adaptations for people with bipolar and
psychosis; these include adaptations made on clinical
and theoretical grounds.
Anti-social behaviour Any anti-social behaviour may put the MBCT teacher
and other people in the group at risk.
Already receiving psychological therapy MBCT requires a significant investment of time and
energy that would be difficult to find alongside
another therapy. In addition, pursuing two therapeutic
paths at once can be confusing for participants, who
may receive different and even conflicting messages
from each approach.
Significant longstanding interpersonal These difficulties would make it more difficult for a
difficulties (e.g., currently meeting criteria for person to engage in the therapy and would likely
personality disorder) that require specialist and adversely affect group functioning. However,
longer-term psychological treatment prior to someone who has received treatment for these
MBCT interpersonal difficulties might find MBCT as a
second line treatment helpful.
Persistent self-harm or suicide risk requiring Mindfulness is an intensive training in awareness and
management for people who use self-injury to regulate their
feelings the longer MBCT practices may be over-
whelming. Mindfulness is a part of dialectical-
behaviour therapy, but here practices are much briefer
and designed to help regulate emotion. Moreover, as
MBCT is a group-based intervention it can be
challenging for the teacher to assess, monitor and
manage any risk whilst also teaching the programme.
21
3.6 Considerations in assessing the safety & suitability of
mindfulness- based courses for participants with substantial
problems23
This guidance is mainly about teaching mindfulness-based interventions (MBIs) such as MBSR
and MBCT to participants with substantial physical or mental health problems. It is also
important to consider the suggestions below when teaching general groups of participants who
are dealing with stress, etc., and when carrying out assessment of participants for any MBI.
One consideration is whether you are teaching a general group of participants, or those with a
specific diagnosis or problem (see also Teacher’s experience below); in the latter case you
need both training and a setting that will support such a group.
Even if the group is general (such as an evening class in a leisure centre) some participants
may still have substantial problems (see Early trauma, past abuse, and dissociative disorders
below). This is one of the reasons we assess participants’ readiness and suitability to take a
course, as not everyone will benefit from a mindfulness course at any time, and for some
people it may be contra-indicated.
The following is useful information to collect about would-be participants in general groups:
• History of mental illness, especially in the last few years – e.g. anxiety and
depression – and any related medication taken
• Recent difficult life events such as bereavement, divorce, job loss, acute illness
and/or its treatment, any major or stressful change such as moving house
3
Acknowledgements to the Center For Mindfulness, University of Massachusetts for use of a version of
their ‘Screening Criteria for Exclusion from the Stress Reduction Program.’
22
• GP’s name and contact details, or those of someone else the participant has agreed
you can contact (this could be their therapist or counsellor) in case of a safety
issue with them; you have an ethical obligation to break confidentiality if you
think the participant is likely to harm themselves or others
Suggested exclusion criteria for general groups (subject to clinical judgement and experience
of teacher, and support available to and motivation of participant):
• Suicidality
• Psychosis
• Acute depression
• Severe social anxiety which would make attending a course very stressful
Participants who have had a recent severe loss such as bereavement or divorce are usually in
too raw a state of distress to find a course helpful; they are well advised to wait till they have
worked through the acute stage of the grieving process and are more settled with their loss
(see also Life crises below).
If participants don’t understand the language of instruction they will need interpretation.
Those with hearing impairment may require an installed loop system if they have an
appropriate hearing aid, or sign language interpretation if they can use this.
Pay careful attention to your own concerns about participants with substantial difficulties, as
well as assessing their motivation and understanding and support available to them, and make
your own judgement on whether they have enough support, and you have enough knowledge,
time, and confidence to work with them.
General considerations
Teacher’s experience
Ensure you have training in and professional experience of the particular problems/illnesses
that participants come with, and an understanding of how these may be affected by practising
mindfulness meditation, and working in a group. If not, work alongside someone else with
these areas of experience. Experts elsewhere can also be helpful, either through their written
23
work, or through personal contact. You may also need to consider the setting where you work
and how it fits your participant group.
Example 1: Only work with participants with a history of mental illness such as depression or
mood disorders if you have training and experience of working with this client group.
Example 2: If working with people in chronic pain or with physical illness, you need to check
access and available space, and have considered what kind of mindful movement would be
suitable, and whether you have experience or back-up available in first aid should that be
necessary. Consult with other appropriately qualified professionals (e.g. yoga teacher,
physiotherapist) if required.
Example 3: Only work with participants with a history of psychosis if you have full
understanding of this illness and experience of working with it, and understand how it may be
affected by mindfulness practice. If you do have appropriate knowledge and experience,
consult the chapter about mindfulness training in Paul Chadwick’s book ‘Person-Based
Cognitive Therapy for Distressing Psychosis.’
If you are trained and very used to working with a particular client group, but there is no
research on mindfulness training with them, and if you have trained in teaching mindfulness
and believe that these clients might benefit from it, you need to:
(a) Consider from your knowledge of your clients and your experience of mindfulness, the
different ways that mindfulness training is likely to affect them and their presentation. How
precisely might MBCT impact on the specific psychological factors that contribute to
developing the problem concerned, and those that maintain it and prevent recovery?
(b) Formulate how mindfulness training could best be used with this client group, including
length and kind of meditation practices; how meditation practice is likely to interact with
their problems; educational material that would enhance and support their use of mindfulness,
in relation to the particular vulnerability factors and maintenance factors identified.
(c) Do some cautious pilot training, evaluate this carefully using appropriate measures, and
use your evaluation to improve or cease the mindfulness courses (see Section 6 below).
(d) Ensure you have permission from the organisation (e.g. the NHS Trust’s Psychological
Therapies Committee) in which the innovation will take place, and put in place the relevant
evaluation tools.
(e) Make it clear to all participants that the course is an exploratory development and they are
part of a development/evaluation.
Examples: These types of evaluations are being done in the UK with people with acquired
brain injury; cardiac disease; obsessive-compulsive disorder, etc.
Participants’ attitudes
Participants’ attitudes, understanding of their own process, and willingness to work with their
experiences and with the teacher are important factors in assessing their readiness to take a
24
mindfulness course. Participants who are open-minded about what may happen, willing to
openly discuss problems that arise with the teacher, and will accept support (and/or leave the
course) if necessary, may be able to take a course with more substantial problems or illness
than participants without these attributes. Participants who believe mindfulness will
magically solve their difficulties are much less likely to do well.
It is always important to encourage participants to find ways of working with the practices
that are both safe and helpful for them. This makes the participant’s experience central, and
empowers them to make the training their own.
Example: If participants suffer from panic or severe anxiety, they may find it very difficult to
tolerate lying or sitting still, especially at the beginning of the course. In this case it may be
helpful to have them start with a simple walking meditation, keeping their attention as much
as possible in sensations in their body. For participants who find the bodyscan frightening, it
can help to keep the eyes open, sit up, or mindfully shift positions, until exposure to the
practice makes it more comfortable.
It is also helpful to discuss beforehand how professionals will introduce themselves in the
group. Otherwise, the sense of ‘being observed’ can inhibit other participants from sharing
their experiences openly. Teachers often find it better to have no more than 2 professionals
on a course (perhaps 3 in a larger group).
Research
Example 1: Two research studies of MBCT for the prevention of depressive relapse have
shown that participants with only 2 previous episodes of major depression (who had their
first episode when adult and following a specific life event, and had normal childhoods) were
less likely to benefit from MBCT than participants with 3 or more previous episodes (who
had started being depressed when younger, and had a history of childhood difficulties (Ma &
Teasdale, 2004; Teasdale et al., 2000). These results have possible clinical implications. E.g.,
people who are experiencing their first or second depression at a young age, and who have
had difficult childhood experiences, might benefit from MBCT straight away rather than
waiting until they have had a number of episodes. However, to date this possibility has not
been investigated through research.
25
Example 2. People whose depression is largely triggered by their own ways of processing
experience may be particularly likely to benefit because MBCT provides ways of working
with these reactive processes.
Example 3: One research study of MBSR for patients with different levels of current
depression and anxiety found that patients with all levels of anxiety (from mild to severe)
could tolerate and benefit from MBSR; however, while patients with mild to moderate levels
of depression could learn to meditate and benefit from it, those with severe levels of
depression were unable to do so (see Giommi in ed. Kwee, 2006). But, see studies of MBCT
adapted for people with significant depressive symptoms already referred to above, where
people with significant depressive symptoms were able to benefit. Maybe this is a difference
between MBCT (designed for depression) and MBSR that is not.
Participants with more severe problems, e.g. treatment-resistant depression (see Kenny &
Williams, 2007) and some cases of PTSD, may be able to take a mindfulness course. It is
essential that they understand what it entails, and are given (and give themselves) full
permission to drop out of the course if they find it unhelpful (though it may be necessary to
debrief fully so as to ensure as far as possible that this is seen as a reflection of the mismatch
between person and approach, rather than a reflection of some defect or inadequacy in the
person). It is most important that they are fully supported, either by the teacher, or by their
own therapist; the former needs to understand the nature of their difficulties, and the latter
needs to understand the experiential, intense and potentially stressful or painful nature of
learning awareness and acceptance in mindfulness-based approaches. It would be important
in the initial interview to clarify that this is in the nature of an exploration, no approach suits
everyone and that mindfulness-based approaches may not suit this person, in which case it is
a wise choice to leave the course. The MBCT therapist needs to both prepare and debrief
participants in these cases.
If therapists are regularly referring clients to you for mindfulness training, give them at least a
taster so they know something about it – if possible, get them to do some training themselves
– many therapists (and their own clients) say they find this helpful.
Clients with problems that are too severe for them to learn mindfulness themselves can be
greatly helped by their carers (professional or family) being given mindfulness training (see
Singh et al., 2004). This can also greatly benefit the carers.
Specific considerations
MBSR and MBCT are generally used with participants with chronic problems or illnesses,
either physical or mental, who are therefore used to dealing with them (though they can learn
kinder and more effective ways to do this). Periods of acute illness (or sometimes an acute
attack of an existing illness) where patients are dealing with high levels of stress, and can be
26
getting used to dealing with a new and different way of being, are generally not good times to
learn mindfulness practice
Life crises
Similarly, when participants have had a recent bereavement, divorce, cancer diagnosis, etc., is
usually not a good time to take a mindfulness course. Pre-existing mindfulness practice is
very helpful in dealing with strong, raw feelings such as grief, shock and anger, but these are
usually too overwhelming for participants to learn how to meditate while dealing with the
recent stressors themselves.
Suicidal tendencies
This is a dangerous vulnerability for new meditators, so people who are feeling suicidal
should be asked to wait and take a course when things are better for them, and then be
carefully monitored in case of reoccurrence. In Oxford and Bangor there is an on going large
research study of presently well participants with recurrent suicidal impulses, with a tailored
intervention (a development of MBCT) and carefully trained teachers. The results of this
research should tell us more about whether and how to work with such participants.
Substance misuse
If participants are currently physically dependent on drugs or alcohol, they are very unlikely
to be able to undertake a normal mindfulness course, as their awareness and ability to stay in
the present are negatively affected because they would either be under the influence of a
substance (which precludes meditative awareness) or in a process of withdrawal; their lives
may also be too chaotic to make a regular commitment. Participants who are psychologically
but not physically dependent on substances, and who meet other criteria for taking a course
(e.g. well motivated to change, some insight) may be able to engage with mindfulness
training, and to work with their reactive use of substances, as would participants dealing with
ruminative thinking, anxiety or stress.
Mindfulness-based Relapse Prevention has been developed specifically for people who are
working with their own tendencies to misuse substances. In a generic group, when assessing
someone where there are concerns about their level of substance use, it would be helpful to
have supervision from someone experienced in using mindfulness within the substance
misuse field. If the participant is suitable to take an 8-week course, their addiction can be
worked with in the same way as any other difficulty.
Participants who are currently psychotic, or out of contact with what is normally considered
reality, are unlikely to be helped by mindfulness meditation, and may be harmed. There is a
small amount of evidence that meditation has triggered psychotic episodes in some
individuals, and although this may not be true of mindfulness meditation, with its emphasis
on grounding in physical sensations and other bodily senses, it would make sense to aim for
27
safety here. See also Teacher’s experience and Participants with severe problems or
vulnerabilities above.
These are all indications to move into mindfulness training with great care, in-depth
understanding of the issues involved, and willingness to support and go at the client’s own
pace. Mindfulness can be a useful adjunct to psychotherapy with such participants, but
should only be introduced when the client has full support from a therapist who understands
mindfulness, and when the client is ready to start making connections with what may be
extremely painful material.
If a participant reports ‘leaving the body’ when meditating, although this can on occasion be
a spiritual experience, it can also sometimes indicate that there are embodied memories that
are too dangerous or painful to face, and the participant is maintaining an important defence
strategy by dissociating. If working with such a participant, it is wise to go very cautiously
indeed, encourage them to come back into their bodies by opening their eyes and focussing
on what they can see (perhaps describing it to themselves or you), shifting position, or getting
up and moving about, having a drink of water, etc. Such ‘grounding’ practices can help
clients to re-establish contact with the here-and-now.
Recognise that many people have suffered from trauma, so there may well be one or more in
any group (careful pre-course assessment may help to establish this). Some participants may
be able to work with the aftermath of trauma using mindfulness, with or without the teacher’s
knowledge of their past. Participants may be understandably reluctant to talk in the group
about difficulties such as flashbacks when meditating, so it is important they feel able to
confide in the mindfulness teacher, and/or their therapists, outside the class.
There has been little use of mindfulness training reported with participants who suffer from
learning disabilities, apart from some initial work by Singh (see his 2003 case study on using
a simple practice of bringing attention to the soles of the feet for a man with learning
disabilities who suffered from outbreaks of anger). Practices would need to be simplified and
carefully tailored.
Singh has also researched mindfulness training for carers of men with severe and multiple
disabilities, and found that this significantly increased the carers’ level of happiness (see
Singh et al. 2004).
Participants with breathing problems may not feel safe using their breath as an ‘anchor’ into
the present moment. They can be guided individually to find another part of the body that
represents a ‘safe place’ for them to place their attention, particularly in early sessions.
Sometimes taking attention lower down in the body (such as the buttocks on the seat or feet
on the floor) can reduce fear and increase calmness. With one or more such participants in a
28
group, it’s helpful to remember to include this in general instructions, e.g. ‘return to the
breath, or to the connection of your body with what is supporting it’.
This could be a difficulty for the participant (e.g. social anxiety) that would make working in
a group stressful or even impossible (in which case consider 1-to-1 mindfulness training).
However, many clients who are apprehensive about being in a group later report that the
group context, if managed well, was experienced as therapeutic in terms of normalizing
experience, providing support and enabling useful social comparisons of experience.
29
3.7 Participant assessment and orientation
The process and procedures for assessing and orienting someone for MBCT have several
aims:
1) Assess the person’s suitability for MBCT, including their readiness (is now the right
time?)
2) Orient the person to MBCT, its background and aims, what it involves
3) Develop a relationship between the teacher and participant that includes a sense of trust,
confidence and safety.
NB: Teachers will have information on participants from research interview, including a
summary of the history, the Time-line and a Crisis plan. Also a message as to whether the
person was considered a ruminator-brooder or not, and hence whether extra attention should
be paid to this during the interview.
We agreed to have (up to) a 1.5hr individual session for all participants. It was an
opportunity to explore particular potential difficulties that might contribute to dropping out,
for example being the only man in a class of women, the only young person in an older group
or having some of the difficulties outlined above.
Participants were also given a handout to take away, summarising the practicalities of
attending the course and the conceptual background to the course.
4
Protocol used in the Staying Well After Depression Trial (Williams et al., 2010). © Williams, 2010.
30
• Any questions right now, so we make sure we answer them?
• Life-time episodes?
B) Let’s consider what happens in the present (more detail in this section, with own
examples)
You are here because you have had episodes of recurrent depression. This course based on
the latest research on vulnerability and maintenance factors in depression. It draws on a
distillation of our knowledge of cognitive behaviour therapy, and mindfulness approaches.
We will be considering vulnerability factors and also what maintains depression once it gets
going- what are your own ideas about this?
This is how we think it works (more emphasis to sections that seem to fit your particular
problems)
• Everyone thinks more negatively when they are depressed than when they are
relatively well.
• During the first episode of depression this takes a while to really build up.
• After repeated episodes of depression strong associations are formed, meaning that
even small triggers like a dip in mood can be a flash-point for depression.
31
• A spiral of negative thinking sets in, which can lead to hopelessness and suicidal
thinking.
• This in turn makes it tempting to withdraw, and avoid more and more situations.
• It can be difficult to extricate oneself from this, once your old beliefs are activated. It
feels a bit like struggling to get out of quicksand.
• Instead of another relapse occurring, it is possible to learn to step back and find
somewhere else to go with the problem. We hope to help you find ways to do this.
Relapse
Alternative response
• Vicious circles of rumination and avoidance: both maintain the depressed mood
Rumination
Depression
Avoidance
32
Let’s consider some examples of your own now (work on this together).
MBCT has been shown to significantly reduce the chance of a recurrence of depression. It
teaches you to:-
• Recognise patterns
• Recognise that you have choices other than slipping back into old patterns
• Refine the capacity to recognise warning signals and take helpful action
• Focus on the here and now. There is no requirement to explore the past
• Meditation means many things to many different people. No need to worry about
whether you will be able to relax or clear your mind. That will not really be the
focus of what we are doing.
• The course is not a space to reflect on the ‘why’ of your experience, instead it
will be inviting a different relationship to experience
There will be lots of different practices for you to try. You will be helped to discover the ones
that are most useful for you. We simply ask you to try all of them during the classes. The
classes provide the chance for you to also practice being kinder and gentler to yourself.
33
Home Practice
There will be homework every week, and you will be asked to practice for up to one hour a
day. This is a short-term investment, not forever. You will explore towards the end which to
carry on with if you wish. Some things you might consider are:-
• Planning how to find the time to practice during the 8 week course
• Getting hold of a CD player, so you can play the CDs with the practices on them
Doing an MBCT course can be challenging for various reasons. However, other past
participants would encourage you that it is worth hanging in there, because the realisations
you arrive at may reduce the impact of depression. Often the difficulties that come up are not
the ones we expected, yet they may be the tip of the iceberg of core difficulties in your life.
(N.B. some potential challenges will be flagged up by the assessor- e.g. ruminative brooding)
• Being in a group. It takes a while to feel at home, but it can be good to see that you
are not alone, and to learn from others
• Feeling under pressure to talk. It is OK to sit back and listen, and to go at your own
pace.
• The huge variety of people, from very different backgrounds. What you have in
common is the wish to learn to overcome recurrent depression.
• You could be the only man/woman/young person etc. in the group- how do you feel
about that?
• Facing emotional issues you might rather avoid. You will learn how to examine these
more closely, without getting overwhelmed.
• The difficulties that might come up (boredom, restlessness etc.) might relate to things
that are difficult for you in a more general sense.
34
• It may not always be obvious how the practices will be helpful to you. Be open-
minded and experiment. Try to stick with it. Think of it as an investment if you like. It
lasts for only eight weeks, so it is worth giving it your best shot.
• Benefits may not be immediately apparent, but it is worth persevering. Changes take
time, and people will respond differently, and at different rates.
• It may seem odd that we are teaching you not to strive for results. It could be that
trying too hard has been part of the problem
• You may feel like giving up at times. Your group leader would like to talk this
through with you if this happens, and give you some extra encouragement or
guidance.
• Think about what you have tried in the past. How well did it work? Is it worth
persevering with this new approach, giving it a fair test? (creative hopelessness)
• Give the programme your best shot. We are cultivating awareness using a balanced
mixture of gentle perseverance and being kinder to yourself.
Confidentiality
• We have asked you to consent to us videoing the instructors running the class, to use
in supervision of the instructors. Do you have any concerns about this?
35
Practical arrangements
• You will be asked to fill in some questionnaires before you start, so you will need to
allow time for this.
• Light refreshments will be available in the break or before the group. You could bring
a sandwich to eat before the group if that helps
• We would like to emphasise the importance of attending each session and letting the
instructor know if you can’t be there.
• Practical difficulties can get in the way of the classes- but we would like to hear from
you if this happens
• Because the class is challenging there may be times when you do not feel like coming.
If this happens we would like you to telephone us and let us know how you are. We
can discuss any problems with you.
• Is it alright with you if we phone you if you miss a class and we have not heard from
you? We will send you the handouts if you do have to miss a class.
• It can feel difficult to come back if you miss a session, but it is worth it. Sessions
build on each other over time.
• Your instructor will be available between sessions for support if this is helpful. We
will give you some contact numbers, and it would be good to keep these in your
folder with your crisis plan.
36
Sample Outline for Orientation Session Used in the Exeter Mindfulness
Network
THEME
The initial assessment interview explains some aspects of depression and the MBCT
programme, and can be used as a starting point for dialogue between instructor and
participants. Forming a therapeutic relationship with each participant and orienting him/her to
the rationale for and practicalities of MBCT are likely to enable full participation. It also
enables instructors to facilitate enquiry in the groups individualised to some degree to
individual’s particular history and goals.
AGENDA
37
•
Relapse
• Signature and Response Plan
Well - 0
…and then?- 2
and then?- 3
and then?-4
Depression- 5
PTO
38
Response Plan (what actions/responses can I choose that will lift my
mood, give me energy, give me a sense of satisfaction and nourish me,
even if I don’t feel like doing them)
When I am well
39
Sample assessment and orientation pro forma
Applicant name:
LM ID number:
Contact number:
Date:
Name:
Designation:
Contact details
Why has the client chosen to do this course at this particular time?
Does the client understand the practice requirements and is it practical and feasible
for them to do the course at this time (is their living situation settled and do they have
the time and space to practice)? Note any issues and discussion about these.
Are there any aspects of the course that are of concern to the client? How are these
to be addressed?
Does the client have a learning disability? Will the cognitive work be accessible to them?
40
Current medication
Depression
Psychosis
Schizophrenia
PTSD
Suicidality
If yes to any of the above, discuss and note details and implications.
What are the implications of any condition or medication on the client’s ability to
participate in the course?
41
Please note if the client has been advised to take the advice of a GP before participating
in the course. How will this be followed up?
What are the client’s strategies and support systems if difficulties arise for them as a result of
the course?
How do they deal with difficulty and who do they turn to for support? Note if the client’s
networks are very limited, and what action should be taken by LM in case of difficulties
arising (e.g. contacting GP or CPN if we are unable to contact the client)
Is the client planning any major changes (house move, change of job, marriage, divorce etc.)
whilst participating in the course?
Has the client had any significant life events or traumas in the past year, including those
listed above and bereavements? If so, note discussion, advice given and reasons for advising
to continue with the course (or not) at this time.
Client’s questions:
42
Information given on:
Bodyscan /
Mindful movement /
Sitting meditation /
Group discussion /
Group activities /
Home practice /
Action agreed:
43
Sample orientation pro forma from the Exeter Mindfulness
Network
Mindfulness-based Cognitive-therapy (MBCT) Orientation Session
Name:
Date:
Time:
The initial orientation interview explains some aspects of depression and the MBCT
programme, and can be used as a starting point for dialogue between instructor and
participants. Forming a therapeutic relationship with each participant and orienting him/her to
the rationale for and practicalities of MBCT are likely to enable full participation in the
groups. It also enables instructors to facilitate enquiry in the groups individualised to some
degree to individual’s particular history and goals.
44
History of Depression: Person’s resources
I explained the background and aims of MBCT and explored with the person how it might
help him or her. I also outlined the practical details of the group.
45
Sample flyer from the Exeter Mindfulness Network given to
participants at the end of the orientation if the teacher and client
decide together that MBCT is appropriate
This flyer describes the practical details of the Exeter Mindfulness Group.
Facilitators:
Where:
When:
How often and long: Eight two-hour and 15 minute sessions, meeting weekly (with a gas
on), with one opportunity to meet others who have participated in
previous groups at a reunion session. At the end of the group you will
be invited to attend follow-ups offered to all former participants of the
Exeter mindfulness groups.
Session Date
1
2
3
Reunion
4
5
6
7
8
• CDs. To support your home mindfulness practice you will be provided with a series of
CDs.
• The following book is available for loan:
o Williams, J. M. G., Teasdale, J. D., Segal, Z. V., & Kabat-Zinn, J. (2007). The
Mindful Way Through Depression: Freeing Yourself from Chronic Unhappiness. New
York: Guildford Press.
• Another relevant book for working with physical health problems and chronic pain is:
o Kabat-Zinn, J. (1990). Full Catastrophe Living: How to Cope with Stress, Pain and
Illness Using Mindfulness Meditation. New York: Delacorte. {available through
Exeter Central Library}
• Websites.
o www.mbct.co.uk.
• Contact: If you have any questions about the MBCT groups contact XX by phone (XX) or
e-mail XX.
46
Preliminary Client Handout for MBCT5
DEPRESSION
Depression is a very common problem. Twenty percent of adults become severely depressed
at some point in their lives. Depression involves both biological changes in the way the brain
works and psychological changes in the way we think and feel. Because of this, it is often
useful to combine biological treatments for depression (which act on the brain) with
psychological approaches (which teach new ways to deal with thoughts and feelings).
TREATMENT OF DEPRESSION
When you have been depressed in the past your doctor may have prescribed antidepressants.
These work through their effects on the chemical messengers in your brain. In depression,
these chemical messengers have often become run down, lowering mood and energy levels,
and disturbing sleep and appetite. Correcting these brain chemicals may have taken a long
time, but most people experience improvements in 6 to 8 weeks.
Although antidepressants generally work well in reducing depression, they are not a
permanent cure – their effects continue only so long as you keep taking the pills. Your doctor
could continue to prescribe antidepressants for months, or even years, since this is now the
recommended way to use antidepressants if further depression is to be prevented by these
means.
However, many people prefer to use other ways to prevent further depression. This is the
purpose of the classes you will be attending.
Whatever caused your depression in the first place, the experience of depression itself has a
number of aftereffects. One of these is likelihood that you will become depressed again. The
purpose of these classes is to improve your chance of preventing further depression. In the
classes, you will learn skills to help you handle your thoughts and feelings differently.
Since many people have had depression and are at risk for further depression, you will learn
these skills in a class with up to a dozen other people who have also been depressed and
treated with antidepressants. In eight two hour sessions, the class will meet to learn new ways
of dealing with what goes on in our minds, and to share and review experiences with other
class members.
After the eight weekly sessions are over, there are reunions every few months which you will
be notified of.
5
© Guilford Press. From Segal, Z. V., Williams, J. M. G., & Teasdale, J. D. (2002). Mindfulness-based
cognitive therapy for depression: A new approach to preventing relapse. New York: Guilford Press. {The
MBCT Manual.}
47
HOMEWORK: THE IMPORTANCE OF PRACTICE
Together, we will be working to change patterns of mind that often have been around for a
long time. The patterns may have become a habit. We can only expect to succeed in making
changes if we put time and effort in to learning skills.
This approach depends entirely on your willingness to do homework between class meetings.
This homework will take at least an hour a day, six days a week, for eight weeks, and
involves tasks such as listening to CDs, performing brief exercises, and so on. We appreciate
it is often very difficult to carve out that amount of time for something new in our lives that
are already very busy and crowded. However, the commitment to spend time on homework is
an essential part of the class; if you do not feel able to make that commitment, it would be
best not to start the classes.
FACING DIFFICULTIES
The classes and the homework assignments can teach you to be more fully aware and present
in each moment of life. The good news is that this makes life more interesting, vivid, and
fulfilling. On the other hand, this means facing what is present, even when it is unpleasant
and difficult. In practice, you will find that turning to face and acknowledge difficulties is the
most effective way, in the long run, to reduce unhappiness. It is also central to preventing
further depression. Seeing unpleasant feelings, thoughts, or experiences clearly, as they arise,
means that you will be in much better shape to ‘nip them in the bud’ before they progress to
more intense or persistent depressions.
In the classes, you will learn gentle ways to face difficulties, and will be supported by the
instructor and the other class members.
Because we will be working to change well established habits of mind, you will be putting in
a lot of time and effort. The effects of this effort may only become apparent later. In many
ways, it is much like gardening – we have to prepare the ground, plant the seeds, ensure that
they are adequately watered and nourished, and then wait patiently for results.
You may be familiar with this pattern from your treatment with antidepressants. Often there
is little beneficial effect until you have been taking the medication for some time. Yet
improvement in your depression depended on your continuing to take antidepressants even
when you felt no immediate benefit.
In the same way, we ask you to approach the classes and homework with a spirit of patience
and persistence, committing yourself to put time and effort in to what will be asked of you,
while accepting, with patience, that the fruits of your efforts may not show straight away.
48
THE INITIAL INDIVIDUAL MEETING
Your initial individual meeting with the MBCT therapist provides an opportunity for you to
ask questions about the classes or raise issues related to the points made in this handout. You
may find it useful, before you come for that interview, to make a note of the questions or
issues that you wish to raise.
Good luck!
The MBCT 8 session plans are described in the MBCT manual in eight consecutive chapters; See
Segal, Z. V., Williams, J. M. G., & Teasdale, J. D. (2002). Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy
for depression: A new approach to preventing relapse. New York: Guilford Press.
However, most MBCT teachers find it helpful to have session plans that provide an aide memoire
when planning for and teaching sessions. These may involve some adaptations and changes to the
manual that enable teachers to teach to their strengths and in their context.
We include below as an example the way MBCT was adapted in a trial comparing MBCT with
maintenance antidepressants (Kuyken et al., 2010). Because these session plans are the copyright
of Guilford Press we offer a single session by way of illustration. The section in italics was added
for the PREVENT Trial and the rest of the text is as it appears in the original 2002 manual.
49
MBCT Therapist Pack
50
MBCT Group: Log of Participants and Attendance
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
Session 1: AUTOMATIC PILOT
THEME
Mindfulness starts when we recognise the tendency to be on automatic pilot and make
a commitment to learning how best to step out of it to become aware of each moment.
Practice in purposely moving attention around the body shows both how simple and
difficult this can be.
AGENDA
53
Guidelines for MBCT Group
Housekeeping
Ground Rules
Time-Keeping
• From now on, each session begins with period of practice so if you do happen
to be late, I will always have a chair or mat out for you, just coming in quietly
and join in practice when you’re ready.
Attendance
• Each session a significant building block to the whole so important to try and
attend all.
• But just say you have to miss one then I'd really appreciate it if you could let
me know in advance by phone or email. And we will miss you if you're not
here...
• And you don't need to be a certain way to come along – you don't need to
come with a smiling face!
• Important that we create a safe place where we can share and learn from each
other..... Might be tempting to go home and share what’s happening in the
group with friends or family and what I would like to suggest is that it’s fine
to talk about your own experience or the group in general terms but not
to mention any names or speak of anyone else’s experience.
• And if you’re out and about and you happen to bump into someone from the
group and they’re with someone else just to be sensitive to the fact that they
may not want to be spoken to….
Participation/Sharing
• We're not here to go over the past or the content of one's problems but seeing
instead if we can work more helpfully with our patterns of mind and body in
the moment – so there may be times when I might invite us all to pause if I
notice we’re getting caught up in lots of thoughts and come back to what's
happening now.
54
• I really welcome you to share your experiences from the practices but
equally there is really no obligation to share – tuning into what feels right for
you...
Commitment
• The sessions but particular the home practice can feel intense, difficult,
You will not necessarily enjoy it – it will feel challenging at times, boredom,
impatience etc. may all be feelings that arise. And this is all part of it – so as
best we can letting go of any expectations about how things should be on
this course or ought to be
'just do it and see what happens'
• Sometimes it may not be clear how what we're doing links with protecting
ourselves from depression but I would just ask you to bring an open mind to
each session, each moment…
55
3.9 MBCT Participant Handouts 6
The handouts for the MBCT course are provided in the MBCT manual in consecutive
chapters; Segal, Z. V., Williams, J. M. G., & Teasdale, J. D. (2002). Mindfulness-based
cognitive therapy for depression: A new approach to preventing relapse. New York:
Guilford Press.
However, most MBCT teachers find it helpful to use these core handouts but add some of
their own that support participant learning. This is particularly true of poetry, where
teachers often have preferred poems.
We include below as an example the handouts used in the PREVENT Trial comparing
MBCT with maintenance antidepressants (Kuyken et al., 2010).
Because these handouts are the copyright of Guilford Press we offer handouts for a single
session only by way of illustration, marking clearly the section in the original 2002
manual and those added for the PREVENT trial.
6
Copied in large part from from Segal, Williams & Teasdale, (2002). Mindfulness-based
Cognitive Therapy. © Guilford Press.
56
Summary of Session 7:
What we actually do with our time from moment to moment, from hour to hour,
from one year to the next, can be a very powerful influence affecting our general
wellbeing and our ability to deal skilfully with depression.
1. Of the things that I do, what nourishes me, what increases my sense of
actually being alive and present rather than merely existing? (up activities)
2. Of the things that I do, what drains me, what decreases my sense of actually
being alive and present, what makes me feel I am merely existing, or worse?
(down activities)
3. Accepting that there are some aspects of my life that I simply cannot change,
am I consciously choosing to increase the time and effort I give to up
activities and to decrease the time and effort I give to down activities?
By being actually present in more of our moments and making mindful decisions
about what we really need in each of those moments, we can use activity to become
more aware and alert, and to regulate mood.
This is true for dealing with both the regular pattern of our daily lives and periods of
low mood that may lead to depression – we can use our day-by-day experience to
discover and cultivate activities that we can use as tools to cope with periods of
worsening mood. Having these tools already available means that we will be more
likely to persist with them in the face of negative thoughts such as “Why bother with
anything?” that are simply part of the territory of depressed mood.
For example, one of the simplest ways to take care of your physical and mental well-
being is to take daily physical exercise – as a minimum, aim for three brisk, 10-
minute walks a day and also, if at all possible, other types of exercise, such as
mindful stretching, yoga, swimming, jogging, and so on. Once exercise is in your
daily routine, it is a readily available response to depressed moods as they arise.
The breathing space provides a way to remind us to use activity to deal with
unpleasant feelings as they arise.
57
USING THE BREATHING SPACE: THE ACTION STEP
After reconnecting with an expanded awareness in the breathing space, it may feel
appropriate to take some considered action. In dealing with depressed feelings, the
following activities may be particularly helpful:
1. Do something pleasurable.
2. Do something that will give you a sense of satisfaction or mastery.
3. Act mindfully.
Ask yourself: What do I need for myself right now? How can I best take care of
myself right now?
Try some of the following:
1. Do something pleasurable.
Be kind to your body: Have a nice hot bath; have a nap; treat yourself to your
favourite food without feeling guilty; have your favourite hot drink; give yourself a
facial or manicure.
Engage in enjoyable activities: Go for a walk (maybe with the dog or a friend); visit
a friend; do your favourite hobby; do some gardening; take some exercise; phone a
friend; spend time with someone you like; cook a meal; go shopping; watch
something funny or uplifting on TV; read something that gives you pleasure; listen
to music that makes you feel good.
58
REMEMBER
1. Try to perform your action as an experiment. Try not to prejudge how you will
feel after it is completed. Keep an open mind about whether doing this will be
helpful in any way.
2. Consider a range of activities and don’t limit yourself to a favourite few.
Sometimes, trying new behaviours can be interesting in itself. ‘Exploring’ and
‘Inquiring’ often work against ‘withdrawal’ and ‘retreat’.
3. Don’t expect miracles. Try to carry out what you have planned as best you can.
Putting extra pressure on yourself by expecting this to alter things dramatically
may be unrealistic. Rather, activities are helpful in building your overall sense of
control in the face of shifts in your mood.
59
7
7
A3 poster developed by Alison Evans and Claire Brejcha for the PREVENT trial
(Kuyken et al., 2010) and now used in the Exeter Mindfulness Network MBCT courses.
60
When Depression Is Overwhelming
Sometimes you may find that depression comes out of the blue. For example, you
may wake up feeling very tired and listless, with hopeless thoughts going through
your mind.
When this happens, it may be useful for you to tell yourself, “Just because I am
depressed now does not mean that I have to stay depressed.”
When things come out of the blue like this, they set off negative ways of thinking in
everyone.
If you have been depressed in the past, it will tend to trigger old habits of thought
that may be particularly damaging: full of overgeneralisations, predictions that this
will go on forever, and ‘back to square one’ thinking. All of these ways of making
sense of what is happening to you will tend to undermine your taking any action.
Having these symptoms does not mean that it needs to go on for a long time or that
you are already in a full-blown episode of depression.
Ask yourself, “What can I do to look after myself to get me through this low period?”
Take a breathing space to help gather yourself. This may help you see your situation
from a wider perspective. This wider perspective allows you to become aware of
both the pull of the old habits of thinking and what skilful action you might take.
61
Session 7
Copy for my GP
… and then? 2
… and then? 3
… and then? 4
Depression! 5
62
Response Plan (what actions can I choose that will lift my mood, give
me energy, give me a sense of satisfaction and nourish me, even if I
don’t feel like doing them)
When I am well
63
AUTOBIOGRAPHY IN FIVE CHAPTERS
64
Home Practice for Week Following Session 7
1. From all the different forms of formal mindfulness practice you have
experienced, settle on a form of practice that you intend to use on a regular,
daily basis for the next few weeks. Use this practice on a daily basis this
week, and record your reactions on the Home Practice Record Form.
2. 3-Minute Breathing Space – Regular: Practise three times a day at times that
you have decided in advance. Record each time you do it by circling an R for
the appropriate day on the Home Practice Record Form; note any
comments/difficulties.
3. 3-Minute Breathing Space – Coping plus Action: Practise whenever you notice
unpleasant thoughts or feelings. Record each time you do the coping
breathing space by circling an X for the appropriate day on the Home Practice
Record Form; note any comments/difficulties.
Name: ………………………………………………………………………
Record on the Home Practice Record Form each time you practise. Also, make a
note of anything that comes up in the Home Practice, so that we can talk about it at
the next meeting.
Minutes Comments
Day/Date Practice spent
(Yes/No) practicing
CD:
Date: RRR
XXXXXX
XXXXXX
CD:
Date: RRR
XXXXXX
XXXXXX
CD:
Date: RRR
XXXXXX
XXXXXX
CD:
Date: RRR
XXXXXX
XXXXXX
CD:
Date: RRR
XXXXXX
XXXXXX
CD:
Date: RRR
XXXXXX
XXXXXX
66
3.10 Preparing to teach an MBCT course - guidance for teachers
It is important to give yourself adequate time and space to prepare yourself for the teaching.
Preparation is needed in several areas:
- Familiarising oneself with the plan for the session, which may mean rereading the
appropriate chapter in the MBCT manual
- Reconnecting with the themes that have been arising in this particular MBCT class in
previous weeks (on an individual and a group level), and reflecting on how these themes
may continue to be woven into the teaching process
- Bring to mind and connect with the individuals who are coming to the class
- Personal practice – in addition to usual daily meditation practice, it is helpful to find a quiet
space to settle and meditate immediately prior to teaching (the only instrument we have for
this work is ourselves – take time to tune!).
- Practical room preparation – setting out the room, preparing materials, teaching aids,
handouts etc.
- Reflecting on the themes/processes that have been arising within the teaching, within oneself
as teacher, within the group, within individuals – make notes/journal while all this is fresh in
preparation for supervision.
- Updating client records as appropriate to requirements of organisational context of class.
- Complete the register of attendance
- Make contact with any participants who were not present in the group – sending out hand outs,
setting up phone contacts etc.
67
3.12 Guided mindfulness CDs and the video / DVD required for
sessions 4 and 5
The MBCT programme relies on participants engaging in mindfulness practice at home, and
this is supported by providing CDs for home practice. The treatment manual and participant
hand outs set out the rationale and sequencing for the home mindfulness practice. The main
practices taught in MBCT are listed below.
1. Body scan
2. Sitting meditation
3. Stretch & Breath
4. Mindful movement
5. Walking meditation
6. 3 step breathing space
Several teachers have recorded CD sets that you can purchase on line:
http://www.bangor.ac.uk/mindfulness/books.php.en?menu=26&catid=10013&subid=0
http://oxfordmindfulness.org/learn/resources/
http://www.umassmed.edu/cfm/products.aspx
The two following book includes CDs with guided mindfulness practices:
The Mindful Way through Depression and Mindfulness: A Practical Guide to Finding Peace
in a Frantic World.
In addition, the MBCT Manual suggests that a video is used in sessions 4 and 5 in which Jon
Kabat-Zinn describes the background and rationale for MBSR and people going through the
8-week course.
Bill Moyers. Healing And The Mind Vol.3 Healing From Within.
This video can be difficult to get hold of; a place to start is to ask other mindfulness teachers
locally or search on line. For example the online seller amazon does have copies available
through its approved sellers.
68
3.13 Sample risk protocol for MBCT participants
Given that depression is one of the most important risk factor for suicide and is associated with
self-injury, it is important that teachers work within a framework that assesses and manages any
risk issues.
Other risks can arise in teaching mindfulness courses and a thoughtful review of these is
important in setting up a service. Below we provide some notes that emerged from a teaching
workshop on this topic.
Risk cannot be eliminated. However it can be in our awareness and there can be
thoughtfulness around it. There are ways to minimise and manage risk. We can also decide
not to take the risk if it is deemed too high.
• Individuals who have experienced abuse may be traumatised, e.g. by body scan
• Clients may be put off meditation; may need to leave the group
• Transferential issues may arise which cannot be managed, or go beyond the scope of
the course
69
• An individual’s expectations may be unrealistic; some may be expecting a therapeutic
group for example
• Individuals may have difficulty hearing and accurately comprehending the teacher;
there is risk of misinterpretation
• The environment where courses are held may present health and safety risks.
• Group members may challenge the teacher in ways that feel unmanageable
• Lack of awareness of group processes and difficulties with group processes and
dynamics
• Meditation may raise issues for individuals which the teacher finds hard to deal with
• Individuals may take more risks with what they bring to the group, the safer they
feel in the group, and this may call on more resources on the part of the teacher
• Mental health background and awareness of the teacher may be or feel limited
70
Managing risk
Pre-course
• Being very clear about the course, and its limitations, i.e. what it is and what it is not
• At the orientation and assessment stage ask participants to fill out a form requesting
information about physical and mental health issues.
• Consider the timing for the participant – is now the right time to attend a course?
Does something else need to happen first?
• Asking whether the participant is in a treatment system of some kind, and considering
how that might interact with the mindfulness course
• Asking the participant about support systems, and what support they might need or
use
• Considering the referral process – how do people “arrive” at doing the mindfulness
course?
• Deciding your own boundaries and also accepting that boundaries can change over
time
• Consider the relationship with your co-facilitator, including the level of trust, how
well you may gel together in leading groups, and the ratio of participants to
facilitators
• Have open discussion with any co-facilitator to clarify roles and actions in case of
difficulties
71
• Checking on Public Liability Insurance and Professional Indemnity Insurance
During
• Ensuring there is time at end of sessions for participants to speak individually/ make
arrangements for some contact if necessary
• Take a breathing space if your sense of what is going on calls for a pause, which can
offer participants and the teacher a chance to re-centre
• Be thoughtful about your choice of language and offer clear and simple instructions;
be aware of your voice becoming monotone, sending people to sleep, and modulate it
• If people have given details about physical limitations, offer alternatives for
movement, sitting, lying positions.
72
4. MBCT course reunions
MBCT is a brief 8-week course to cultivate participants’ mindfulness and skills for staying well
in the long-term. Participants typically come with a long-standing history of depression and in
this context an 8-week course is a very brief intervention. Reunions or follow-up classes have
the intention of supporting ongoing mindfulness practice and learning. We overview several
emerging models from MBSR and MBCT for running reunions, provide an example session
plan and an example reunion invitation flyer.
73
4.2 Example Session Plan for MBCT Reunion
THEME
The key themes in follow-up sessions are reinforcing people’s mindfulness practice, helping
people overcome blocks to continuing practice, identifying positive reasons to do so and
reinforcing changes that are sustaining recovery. Continuing to “weave the parachute”
through daily informal and formal mindfulness practice enables people to continue to develop
and grow. Use of relapse signatures/response plans enables participants to begin to realise
that they can transform early experiences of depression into opportunities for learning and
skilful behaviours. Embodying a focus on the present communicates the programmes central
message powerfully. Working with difficulties in follow-ups will be a powerful illustration
of the programme’s application to recurrent depression.
• In addition to your personal preparation before the class, remember to bring a reading
and any additional resources that may be helpful to participants.
74
4.3 Example Invitation to MBCT Reunion
Facilitators:
Where:
When:
Please contact XX on XX if you would like to discuss the reunion meeting or if you cannot
attend and would like your apologies to be passed on to others from your group. If we do
not hear from you over five consecutive reunions we’ll assume you no longer
wish to attend.
75
5. Training and supervision
The network is supported by all the main training organisations in the UK who train teachers to
deliver MBSR, MBCT and Breathworks courses.
The network meets annually to develop consensus on good practice standards for teaching
mindfulness-based courses and for training others to teach them.
76
UK Network for Mindfulness-Based Teacher Trainers – affiliated organisations
Breathworks www.breathworks-mindfulness.org.uk
77
UK Network for Mindfulness-Based Teachers
These guiding principles have been developed to promote good practice in teaching
mindfulness-based courses. Mindfulness courses are intended to teach people practical skills
that can help with physical and psychological health problems and on going life challenges.
The main approaches used in the UK are Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR),
Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) and the Breathworks Mindfulness Based
approaches to Pain and Illness (MBPI), all of which are normally taught over eight 2-3 hour
sessions. MBSR is a group-based programme developed by Jon Kabat-Zinn and colleagues at
the University of Massachusetts Medical Centre, Centre for Mindfulness (CFM) for
populations with a wide range of physical and mental health problems
(www.umassmed.edu/cfm/home/index.aspx). MBCT is an integration of MBSR with Cognitive
Behavioural Therapy (http://mbct.co.uk/). It was initially developed by Zindel Segal, Mark
Williams and John Teasdale to help recovered recurrently depressed participants and has
been recommended by NICE for this group. MBCT is evolving to be taught to a broader
range of people based on psychological understandings of what causes human distress and in
a range of settings (e.g., health service, schools, forensic settings). The Breathworks MBPI
course is a development of MBSR, specifically for people with chronic pain and / or other
long-term (physical) health conditions (www.breathworks-mindfulness.org.uk). Developed by
Vidyamala Burch, it combines key elements of MBSR and MBCT with particular approaches
to mindfulness in daily life and mindful movement that are suitable to this population. It also
includes compassion meditation as a core component.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Familiarity through personal participation prior to commencing teacher training, with the
mindfulness-based course curriculum that they will be learning to teach, with particular in-
depth personal experience of all the core meditation practices of this mindfulness-based
programme.
78
2. Knowledge and experience of the populations that the mindfulness-based course will be
delivered to, including experience of teaching, therapeutic or other care provision with groups
and/or individuals, unless such knowledge and experience is provided to an adequate level by
the mindfulness-based teacher training itself. An exception to this can be when teaching with
the help of a colleague who knows well the population to whom the course will be delivered
and has a relevant qualification. They would also need to have an understanding of
mindfulness-based approaches.
practice:
− on going contacts with other mindfulness practitioners and teachers, built and
and
79
5.2 Good Practice Guidelines for Trainers of Mindfulness-Based
Teachers
The UK Network for Mindfulness-Based Teacher Trainers has developed Good Practice
Guidance for trainers of MBCT teachers
Our Good Practice Guidelines for teachers are standards which teacher trainers need to meet
and adhere to. In addition they would normally meet the following Good Practice Guidelines
for trainers of mindfulness-based teachers:
1. Have had full teaching responsibility for at least nine mindfulness-based courses over
a minimum of three years
2. Have been assessed to be of an acceptable level of competence in teaching
mindfulness-based courses
3. Have trained to be a trainer via an apprenticeship with a more experienced trainer
4. To continue to teach beginning meditators alongside training teachers.
5. Be in a regular supervisory relationship in relation to teaching practice and its
interface with personal mindfulness practice
6. Attend annual retreats which facilitate practice at depth, some of which are at least 7-
10 days in duration and are chosen in discussion with the trainer’s practice
teacher/supervisor to meet current needs
7. Stay up to date with the current and developing evidence base for mindfulness-based
interventions
8. Be up to date with current best practice for methods of assessing mindfulness-based
teaching competency
9. Be steeped in the practice and understanding of mindfulness which is informed by
both its contemporary applications and its historical antecedents.
10. Be a strong team player - willing to operate in the context of a training team and in
connection with others who are training teachers in the UK context.
Mindfulness-based teacher trainers need a well developed skills, understandings and attitudes
in the following areas:
1. An experientially gained understanding of the complexity of mindfulness as an
approach and its transformational potential.
2. An in depth understanding of the aims and intentions of the full range of curriculum
components within the mindfulness-based course they are training others to teach
3. An understanding of the underlying theoretical principles of the mindfulness-based
courses they are training others to teach
4. Understand and be equipped to train others in the principles underpinning the
adaptation of mindfulness-based courses to different contexts and populations
80
5. Well developed skills in working with groups, supporting trainees to identify their
learning needs, creating a safe and challenging learning environment.
6. Well developed skills in providing feedback to trainees which identifies strengths and
weaknesses, and facilitates new learning.
7. An understanding of the complex interface between MBAs taught in a therapeutic
context and mindfulness as taught in traditional or specific cultural contexts and a
commitment to being transparent in regard to which context(s) mindfulness
teaching/training is being offered.
The trainer will work within the ethical framework of his/her profession and will additionally
have particularly developed sensitivities in relation to:
81
5.3 Supervision of MBCT teachers
82
Bangor University’s Good Practice Guidelines for Supervisors of
MBCT/MBSR Teachers
Supervisors need to:
NB
• If the supervisor is not trained or qualified in the clinical field being supervised, the
supervisor will limit his/her supervision to non-clinical areas of mindfulness content
and process.
• Clinical responsibility is always to be held by a separate clinical supervisor and this
must be clearly detailed in the supervision contract.
83
5.4 Article on training for mindfulness-based teachers
This article offers an overview of the principles and processes which underpin training for
MBCT teachers
Crane, R.S., Kuyken, W., Hastings, R., Rothwell, N., Williams, J.M.G., (2010) Training
teachers to deliver mindfulness-based interventions: learning from the UK experience,
Mindfulness, 1, 74–86. DOI 10.1007/s12671-010-0010-9
http://rd.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12671-010-0010-9
84
5.5 MBCT teacher training routes
There are two broad training routes to gain skills in teaching MBCT:
2. Supervised Teacher Training Pathway. The section that follows summarises the elements
that make up this training route.
A
professional
Participation
in
an
Continuation
of
daily
practice
supported
by
qualification
in
8
week
opportunities
for
reflection
and
inquiry,
mental
health,
MBCT/MBSR
reading,
listening
to
talks
Personal
physical
care,
course
Participation
in
a
longer
residential
teacher
led
mindfulness
education
or
Integration
in
to
mindfulness
meditation
retreat
with
silent
practice
/
social
care
or
equivalent
life
daily
life
a
practice
periods
(approximately
5-‐8
days)
Personal
of
the
formal
and
experience
qualities/
informal
practices
Awareness
of
the
good
practice
guidelines.
Personal
taught
in
Professional
requisite
MBCT/MBSR
training
relational
skills
Keeping
a
e.g.
warmth,
reflective
diary
empathy
around
Personal
Mindfulness
Mindfulness
practice,
teaching
practice
of
mindfulness
and
the
integration
of
the
two
Participation
in
a
residential
teacher
85
Pre-‐requisite
Foundation
Beginning
to
teach
through
to
competency
in
skills
and
level/Preparing
to
teaching
MBCT/MBSR
(assessed
using
the
knowledge
teach
MBI-‐TAC)
led
mindfulness
meditation
retreat
with
some
silent
periods
(approximately
2-‐
4
days)
Through
workshops,
lectures,
talks,
reading
recommended
books/
journals/
research
papers,
CPD
events
Experience
of
Teaching
Moving
the
teaching
in
a
graded
way
to
work
running
component
parts
based
settings,
Maybe
co
leading
a
group
to
groups
of
the
8-‐week
begin
and
moving
to
further
independence.
Teacher
course
in
safe
Regular
supervision
(from
an
experienced
Training/
settings
with
Mindfulness-‐based
teacher)
either
in
situ
(as
a
peers
with
Supervision/
feedback
from
co
leader)
or
via
supervision.
Process
include
to
reflection/inquiry
of
own
practice
in
relation
to
peers
and
Assessment
teaching
and
periodic
feedback
on
teaching
experienced
MBCT/MBSR
through
use
of
video
recording
or
live
observation.
86
Pre-‐requisite
Foundation
Beginning
to
teach
through
to
competency
in
skills
and
level/Preparing
to
teaching
MBCT/MBSR
(assessed
using
the
knowledge
teach
MBI-‐TAC)
Observation
of
others
teaching
live
and/or
via
DVD
• Assessment
(by
mentor)
of
current
experience,
skills
and
knowledge
to
establish
that
all
pre-‐
requisites
are
met.
1
• Agreement
(with
Mentor)
on
an
individualised
pathway
and
\meline
that
builds
on
exis\ng
experience,
skills
and
knowledge
and
allows
for
comple\on
of
all
the
areas
from
founda\on
through
to
competency
to
teach
MBCT/MBSR.
Progression
and
growth
allows
for
moving
2
forward
and
backwards
through
the
pathway.
• Pathway
training
begins.
The
student
keeps
a
Por]olio
of
evidence
throughout
the
process.
This
may
include
cer\ficates
for
CPD
events,
reflec\ve
wri\ngs,
supervision
notes,
statements
from
mentor/supervisor
and
any
feedback
notes.
The
mentor
helps
to
steer
the
course
through
the
pathway
including
agreement
between
mentor
and
student
on
readiness
for
formal
3
assessment.
• Formal
assessment
(completed
by
an
experience
assessor
using
the
Mindfulness-‐based
Interven\ons
Teaching
Aessement
Criteria
MBI-‐TAC)
culmina\ng
in:
• level
of
competency
is
reached
in
all
domains
and
pathway
ends.
4
•
or
a
process
is
agreed
(with
the
mentor)
for
further
experience,
knowledge
and
skills
and
a
further
assessment.
• Once
competence
in
all
domains
on
the
MBI-‐TAC
is
established
a
Cer\ficate
of
Competency
and
Comple\on
of
a
Supervised
pathway
in
MBCT
or
MBSR
is
awarded
and
the
teacher
agrees
to
work
within
the
UK
Network
for
Mindfulness-‐based
Teachers
Good
Prac\ce
Guidelines
5
87
5.6 Article on mindfulness-based teaching competency
This article offers an overview of the principles and processes which underpin MBCT teaching
competency
Crane R.S., Kuyken, W., Williams, J. M. G., Hastings, R., Cooper, L., Fennell, M.J.V. (2012),
Competence in teaching mindfulness-based courses: concepts, development, and assessment,
Mindfulness, 3, 1-76-84. DOI: 10.1007/s12671-011-0073-2
http://www.springerlink.com/openurl.asp?genre=article&id=doi:10.1007/s12671-011-0073-
2&cm_mmc=event-_-articleAuthor-_-assignedToIssue-_-0
88
5.7 Mindfulness-Based Interventions: Teaching Assessment
Criteria
Domain 5: Conveying course themes through interactive inquiry and didactic teaching
It uses the well-established Dreyfus scale of competency in clinical practice ranging from
incompetent to beginner, to advanced beginner to competent, to proficient to advanced.
http://www.bangor.ac.uk/mindfulness/MBITAC.php.en?catid=&subid=10338
89
6. Evaluation of MBCT Courses8
It is important for teachers to evaluate their MBCT courses because it provides confidence to the
teacher and service that the courses are helping participants as intended and are not causing harm.
Evaluation can be undertaken in different ways and this section outlines some broad guidance for
anyone wishing to undertake evaluation of their courses. Each approach has advantages and
disadvantages and these are set out. It is beyond the scope of this resource kit to offer
comprehensive guidance for service evaluation as it will be dependent on the particular context in
which the service is delivered, the resources available etc., so rather we offer some notes, ideas and
resources for where teachers can access additional guidance.
• Does MBCT work in our service setting, with our clients and our MBCT teachers?
• For who is it working / not working?
• To tell us what participants think of our service.
• Challenge our beliefs.
• Explore new applications. That is to say if we adapt MBCT for a new setting /
population, is it still effective?
• Maintain / gain funding for our service.
• Asks “good” questions (this is probably the most important principle to guide your
evaluation!),
• Uses valid and relevant methods,
• Improves the quality of clinical care,
8
The notes are based on a one-day workshop taught by Willem Kuyken.
90
• Improves cost-effectiveness,
• Is inclusive, collaborative and transparent and
• Commands the respect of service users and professionals
An evaluation can have a number of different foci (Maxwell, 1984, British Medical Journal):
• Access to services (for the whole community). That is to say, given the community we
are seeking to serve, how well are we making our service accessible? This includes
waiting times for people who are entering the service.
• Effectiveness (for individual clients). That is to say, for individual clients who
participate in our service, does MBCT work, are changes observed in the intended
outcomes?
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Steps in carrying out an evaluation
The quality of the evaluation question will largely determine the quality of the evaluation and
the ease with which it can be carried out, analysed, reported and acted upon. It is therefore a
very good use of time to give a lot of thought to exactly what evaluation question you want to
answer. Is it about access, is it about particular outcomes, is it about participants’ experiences
…?
• Specific: i.e., what exactly is the service trying to do, in clear and operational terms?
• Measurable: i.e., the question is stated in such a way that the answer can be measured
/ observed.
• Achievable: i.e., the intended outcomes are realistically achievable and the outcomes
are realistically measurable.
• Relevant: i.e., the question is important, is relevant to the service objectives, to the
teacher and to the participants in an MBCT course.
• Time anchored: i.e., the question has an explicit or implicit time frame whereby a
particular change or outcome would be expected, normally within a stated window of
time and
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• Bears in mind the target population: i.e., who are we trying to help, and in what way?
For an MBCT for recurrent depression service: Do my MBCT courses for people with a
history of recurrent depression lead to clinically significant reductions in depressive
symptoms and improvements in quality of life from before to after the course? Are rates of
relapse a year after my MBCT courses comparable to rates of relapse in the published
research trials (approximately 1/3)?
For an MBCT course for the general public: Is my MBCT course for the general public
producing positive changes in mindfulness and self-compassion and improvements in quality
of life across a range of domains (physical, psychological and social) from before to after the
course? Are any improvements sustained six months later? Are clients subjectively satisfied
with the service?
In considering the design for your evaluation there are a few issues to bear in mind.
• If your evaluation question involves looking at changes, you need before and after
measures of the dimension you are evaluating.
• Measures need to be the same before and after the mindfulness courses. They also
need to be sensitive to change.
• Informed consent. I.e., have you asked participants for their consent to do the
evaluation having given them a full and clear description of what you want to do?
• Protection of participants. I.e., are there any risk issues you need to think through (see
Section 3.13 above). Some evaluation measures might expose participant risk issues
or care needs? For example some psychiatric measures ask about patient’s suicidal
ideation / intent. What procedures are in place if someone discloses that s/he is
actively suicidal?
• Anonymity. I.e., will you ensure participants’ data is protected in line with reasonable
safeguards for participant anonymity?
• Data storage. I.e., will you store data in line with data protection guidance nationally
and for your organisation?
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There are many different ways of designing an evaluation study. These need to be rigorous
enough to be able to answer the evaluation question but also pragmatic enough to be feasible
in the service context within the available resources. Broadly speaking more rigorous designs
can tend to be more resource intensive, so there is always something of a trade-off between
design quality and feasibility. However, if a longer-term mindfulness is being established a
cost-effective evaluation can be designed into the service.
Uncontrolled designs
There are several designs that do not include a control group that are pragmatic, but
fundamentally lack the ability to rule out definitively that any observed effects are not simply
an artefact of time or some unknown other factors. These are listed in order of increasing
strength of design, but also decreasing pragmatism.
• Post only design. After the MBCT some measure or observation is taken and used to
answer the evaluation question. An example is the questionnaire that participants
complete in session 8 that asks for a rating of the MBCT course from 1 to 10 and
qualitative comments in response to several questions about participants’ experience
of the 8-week programme. These are relatively easy to collect, but they are prone to
participants saying what they think the teacher wants to hear, have no way of
comparing with any pre-MBCT baseline data and capture only the views of people
who stayed with whole 8-week of the course.
• Pre - post design. This design takes measures that address the evaluation question
before and after the MBCT group and typically reports changes in these measures
across time. Sometimes with well-chosen measures it is possible to interpret pre-
MBCT and post-MBCT levels of a particular outcome of interest in terms of severity
of well-being / dysfunction as well as the clinical meaningfulness of any changes (see
worked example below). However, with this design it is not possible to rule out the
possibility that observed changes are an artefact of time or some unknown other
variable.
• Pre - post – follow-up design. This design builds on the design above, but given that
MBCT has the intention of cultivating longer-term gains it includes a third point of
evaluation at a pre-determined follow up point. This enables an evaluation of the
sustained effect of MBCT over time. All the MBCT relapse prevention trials have
followed up people over a year, for example.
• Stable baseline – pre-post – follow –up design. This design builds on the design
above, but tries to rule out more compellingly the possibility that changes are simply a
function of time. It does so by including a period before the MBCT courses where two
or more observations are taken, with the assumption that there should be no
substantive changes before the intervention on the outcomes of interest. So the
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evaluation would predict a stable baseline prior to starting MBCT, with a clinical
meaningful change during the MBCT that is sustained into follow-up.
An example of change over time in depressive symptoms (Beck Depression Inventory, Second
Edition) from baseline, to pre-MBCT, to post-MBCT, to 6-month follow-up among people
participating in an MBCT programme.
MBCT
30
25
20
15
MBCT
10
5
0
Baseline
Before
MBCT
Acer
MBCT
Six
month
follow-‐up
By simply looking at this graph, this evaluation can be interpreted as follows. Participants are
entering the service with moderate levels of depressive symptomatology that is stable over
time before the MBCT course. Average levels of depression drop to the minimal range
across the 8-week MBCT course and stay in the minimal range at six month follow up, even
though there is a slight rebound in depressive symptoms from after the MBCT course to the
six month follow up. It would be possible to test this interpretation with some statistical tests
if the numbers of participants was large enough. It is important to look at variability in
people’s scores at each time point, with small numbers even on a case-by-case basis. This
enables you to establish how consistent the pattern is across everyone. It is possible to have
this broad pattern of findings but have some people who get worse – this would be important
to know.
Controlled designs
Controlled designs introduce a well-chosen comparison group that enables a test of MBCT
against the comparison group, thus ruling out the possibility that any changes are simply an
artefact of time that would happen without participating in an MBCT course.
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• Wait-list control. A relatively straightforward control group is to compare the pre-
post MBCT changes on evaluation measures against a group of people who are on a
waiting list and not yet receiving treatment, tested over a comparable 8-week period.
The assumption here is that we would not expect the wait list to improve as they have
not received any treatment yet. While better than an uncontrolled design this design
makes the assumption that being on a waiting list is neutral; there is some evidence
that people have reactions to being on a waiting list that can be reflected in the
evaluation measure. Also, in this design there is also commonly unequal drop out
from the two groups for all sorts of reasons.
• Controlled comparison groups. This design is the same as above, but care is taken in
selecting a comparison group that is matched to the MBCT course on key factors,
such as severity of presenting problems pre-treatment, gender, age etc. This enables
greater confidence in any comparison being a function of the treatments rather than an
artefact of the comparison group selected.
• Randomised controlled trial. This is considered the best way of evaluating whether a
treatment is effective because random allocation means that the only different
between the MBCT and the comparison group is the treatment itself. Everything else
is standardised. However, a randomised controlled design is rarely appropriate for a
service evaluation because random allocation is not normally acceptable in routine
clinical practice (people want a particular treatment, not random allocation to
treatments) and running a randomised controlled trial requires considerable expertise
and resource that is unlikely to be available to most clinical services.
• Comparison against norms for population and scales and other data sets. This final
approach is appropriate for all of the designs above. It involves selecting measures for
which there are population norms and guidance on how to interpret scores within the
evaluation against these norms. This enables the comparison of data collected in an
evaluation to be benchmarked against meaningful norms for the population and
indeed MBCT trials. This allows a meaningful interpretation of any evaluation results.
For example, many quality of life measures provide population norms by age and
gender and cut-offs for different levels of quality of life, so you can characterise your
MBCT participants before and after the courses on a range from very poor to
excellent quality of life. Most major classes of outcome measures include some well
standardised measures with these sorts of normative data. In the worked example
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above and below the depression scores are interpreted in terms of cut-offs that
distinguish minimal, mild, moderate and severe levels of depressive symptom
severity. This enables the evaluation to be able to be clear about the level of
functioning before and after the MBCT courses and to compare this with normative
data or indeed with changes observed in larger scale published trials. This is
important, because one of the best predictors of depressive relapse is low-grade
residual depressive symptoms, so if your MBCT courses are helping people address
these symptoms this is evidence of reducing their risk for relapse.
30
25
20
15 MBCT
Wait-‐list
control
10
5
0
Baseline
Before
MBCT
Acer
MBCT
Six
month
follow-‐
up
Qualitative methods
Qualitative methods are ways of capturing the experiences of people in an evaluation, and
are appropriate in providing a richer and more phenomenological account of clients’
experiences of MBCT.
Qualitative research:
• Is sceptical about theories or “big ideas” that generalise across individuals / groups
• Investigates and describes (rather than makes hypotheses and objectively tests
hypotheses)
• Typically asks that researchers’ background and assumptions are explicit in the
research process
The following are examples of qualitative methods, broadly organised from more descriptive
to more inferential methods for analysing data:
• Content analysis
• Thematic analysis
• Grounded theory
• Discourse analysis
The following are texts for conducting qualitative research to unpack participants’
experiences:
Flick, U. (2006) An introduction to qualitative research (3rd edition). Pine Forge Press.
The following are a few examples of papers that used qualitative methods:
Allen, M., Bromley, A., Kuyken, W., & Sonnenberg, S. J. (2009). Participants' experiences of
mindfulness-based cognitive therapy: "It changed me in just about every way possible".
Behav Cogn Psychother, 37, 413-430.
When selecting outcome measures the most important consideration is your evaluation
question. That is to say, if you want to evaluate changes in mindfulness you need a measure
of mindfulness that assesses your understanding of mindfulness. In the example evaluation
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questions above, this would be measures of residual depressive symptoms, depressive relapse
and quality of life for the first question and measures of mindfulness, self-compassion,
quality of life and client satisfaction for the second question. Once you have identified the
outcomes you want to evaluate you need to identify the most relevant, well validated
measure, which ideally provides scores that you are clinically meaningful and can be
comparable with results from other studies.
Below are some issues to consider when choosing measures. The measures should be able to:
It is best to select well-validated measures, which means simply that the measure has been
shown to measure what it purports to measure, does so consistently regardless of who is
administering the measure and is sensitive to change. These criteria are often described as
follows:
• Reliability
• Validity
• Sensitivity to change
Equally important is the acceptability of a measure to clients. Is the measure well formatted,
structured, an acceptable length and so on. Getting some client feedback is a good way to
establish this for your setting.
Finally, it is important to consider if the measure is free to use or if it copyrighted and there
are costs associated with its use.
Two useful references if you are trying to decide on appropriate instruments are:
Ann Bowling, 'Measuring Health. A review of quality of life measurement scales' (1997), and
'Measuring Disease. A review of disease-specific quality of life measurement scales' (1995).
Both published by Open University Press.
Measures of mindfulness
Often services want to use measures of mindfulness as part of their evaluation. After all, it is
a mindfulness-based intervention and it is important to demonstrate that it is indeed leading to
changes in mindfulness. There has been quite a lot of work developing measures of
mindfulness and self-compassion and all the measures are somewhat different in terms of
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their understanding of mindfulness, their focus, their length, their usefulness with particular
populations and their psychometric properties. We list the main measures and suggest that the
criteria above are used to choose the most appropriate measure. When selecting a measure of
mindfulness it is particularly important to read the questionnaire items for yourself to get a
sense of their content.
• Kentucky Inventory of Mindfulness Skills (KIMS: Baer et al., 2004) and its derivative
the Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire (FFMQ: Baer et al., 2006).
There is an excellent resource where all the key publications relating to these measures are
listed: http://www.mindfulexperience.org/measurement.php
Steps in carrying out an evaluation. 4. Running the evaluation, analysing the findings
and writing up and acting on the evaluation
Having asked a good evaluation question, chosen a design and selected your measures, the
next step is to run the evaluation and analyse the findings. This involves the usual aspects of
running a research project, good attention to detail, project management skills, data entry and
analysis skills. Some good resources that outline these aspects of an evaluation are listed
below. Probably the best single reference that provides an overview of many of the issues
outlined above is the book by Barker, Pistrang and Elliott.
Barker, C., Pistrang, N. & Elliott. (2002). Research methods in clinical and counselling
psychology, Second Edition. Chichester: Wiley. [especially see the chapter on evaluation].
Miles, J. & Gilbert, P. (2005). A handbook of research methods for clinical and health
psychology. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Streiner, D.L. & Norman, G.R. (1989). Health measurement scales: A practical guide to their
development and use. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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7. Further resources
* Core resources
Readings
*Allen, M., Bromley, A., Kuyken, W., & Sonnenberg, S. J. (2009). Participants'
experiences of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy: "It changed me in just about every way
possible". Behav Cogn Psychother, 37, 413-430. [A qualitative study of people’s experience
of MBCT]
Baer, R. A., Smith, G. T., & Allen, K. B. (2004). Assessment of mindfulness by self-
report - The Kentucky inventory of mindfulness skills. Assessment, 11, 191-206.
Barnhofer, T., Crane, C., Hargus, E., Amarasinghe, M., Winder, R., & Williams, J. M.
(2009). Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy as a treatment for chronic depression: A
preliminary study. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 47(5), 366-373
Beck, A. T., Rush, A. J., Shaw, B. F., & Emery, G. (1979). Cognitive therapy of
depression. New York: Guilford Press. (Text that describes CBT of depression that MBCT
has drawn on).
Bennett-Goleman, T. (2001). Emotional Alchemy: How the Mind Can Heal the Heart.
New York: Three Rivers Press.
Bertschy, G. B., Jermann, F., Bizzini, L., Weber-Rouget, B., Myers-Arrazola, M., &
Van der Linden, M. (2008). Mindfulness based cognitive therapy: A randomized controlled
study on its efficiency to reduce depressive relapse/recurrence. Journal of Affective
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Disorders, 107, S59-S60.
Bogels, S., Lehtonen, A., & Restifo, K. (2010). Mindful Parenting in Mental Health
Care. Mindfulness. [ Nice theoretical article on why and how mindfulness might be helpful
in working with parents].
Bogels, S., Hoogstad, B., van Dun, L., de Schutter, S., & Restifo, K. (2008).
Mindfulness Training for Adolescents with Externalizing Disorders and their Parents.
Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy, 36, 193-209.
Bondolfi, G., Jermann, F., der Linden, M. V., Gex-Fabry, M., Bizzini, L., Rouget, B.
W. et al. (2010). Depression relapse prophylaxis with Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy:
replication and extension in the Swiss health care system. J Affect Disord, 122, 224-231.
Britton, W., Fridel, K. W., Payne, J. D., & Bootzin, R. R. (2005). Improvement in
sleep and depression following mindfulness meditation: A PSG study. Sleep, 28, A315.
Broderick, P. (2005). Mindfulness and coping with dysphoric mood: Contrasts with
rumination and distraction. Cognitive Therapy and Research, 29, 501-510.
Carson, J. W., Carson, K. M., Gil, K. M., & Baucom, D. H. (2004). Mindfulness-
based relationship enhancement. Behavior Therapy, 35, 471-494.
Chadwick, P., Taylor, K. N., & Abba, N. (2005). Mindfulness groups for people with
psychosis. Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy, 33, 351-359.
* Crane, R., Kuyken, W., Hastings, R. P., Rothwell, N., & Williams, J. M. G. (2010).
Training teachers to deliver mindfulness-based interventions: Learning from the UK
experience. Mindfulness, 74-86. [Describes routes to training in the UK]
Davidson, R. J., Kabat-Zinn, J., Schumacher, J., Rosenkranz, M., Muller, D.,
Santorelli, S. F. et al. (2003). Alterations in brain and immune function produced by
mindfulness meditation. Psychosomatic Medicine, 65, 564-570.
Dimidjian, S. & Linehan, M. M. (2003). Defining an agenda for future research on the
clinical application of mindfulness practice. Clinical Psychology-Science and Practice, 10,
166-171.
Eisendrath, S. J., Delucchi, K., Bitner, R., Fenimore, P., Smit, M., & McLane, M.
(2008). Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy for treatment-resistant depression: A pilot
study. Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, 77, 319-320.
Eyberg, S.M., & Graham-Pole, J.R., (2005). Mindfulness and behavioural parent
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training: Commentary. Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, 34, 792-794.
Fennell, M., & Segal, Z. (2011). Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy: culture clash
or creative fusion? Contemporary Buddhism, 12(1), 125-142. doi: Pii 938642598
* Fjorback, L. O., Rehfeld, E., Schroder, A., Arendt, M., & Fink, P. (2008). Review:
randomized controlled trials of Mindfulness-Based Stress reduction and mindfulness based
cognitive therapy. Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 64, 650. {Good review of trials}.
Fjorback, L. O., Arendt, M., Ornbol, E., Fink, P., & Walach, H. (2011). Mindfulness-
Based Stress Reduction and Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy - a systematic review of
randomized controlled trials. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 124(2), 102-119. {Systematic
review of trials}.
* Grepmair, L., Mitterlehner, F., Rother, W., & Nickel, M. (2006). Promotion of
mindfulness in psychotherapists in training and treatment results of their patients. Journal of
Psychosomatic Research, 60, 649-650.
Hofmann, S. G., Sawyer, A. T., Witt, A. A., & Oh, D. (2010). The effect of
mindfulness-based therapy on anxiety and depression: A meta-analytic review. J Consult Clin
Psychol, 78, 169-183.
*Kabat-Zinn, J. (1990). Full Catastrophe Living: How to Cope with Stress, Pain and
Illness Using Mindfulness Meditation. New York: Delacorte.
*Kabat-Zinn, J. (2005). Coming to Our Senses: Healing Ourselves and the World
Through Mindfulness. Piatkus Books.
Kabat-Zinn, J., Wheeler, E., Light, T., Skillings, A., Scharf, M. J., Cropley, T. G. et
al. (1998). Influence of a mindfulness meditation-based stress reduction intervention on rates
of skin clearing in patients with moderate to severe psoriasis undergoing phototherapy (UVB)
and photochemotherapy (PUVA). Psychosomatic Medicine, 60, 625-632.
Kabat-Zinn, J., Massion, A. O., Kristeller, J., Peterson, L. G., Fletcher, K. E., Pbert, L.
et al. (1992). Effectiveness of A Meditation-Based Stress Reduction Program in the
Treatment of Anxiety Disorders. American Journal of Psychiatry, 149, 936-943.
* Kuyken, W., Byford, S., Taylor, R. S., Watkins, E. R., Holden, E. R., White, K.,
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Barrett, B., Byng, R., Evans, A., Mullan, E., Teasdale, J.D. (2008). Mindfulness-based
cognitive therapy to prevent relapse in recurrent depression. Journal of Consulting and
Clinical Psychology,76, 966-978. [First trial comparing MBCT with another active
treatment].
* Kuyken, W., Watkins, E. R., Holden, E. R., White, K., Taylor, R. S., Byford, S.,
Evans, A., Radford, Teasdale, J.D. & Dalgleish, T. (2010). How does mindfulness-based
cognitive therapy work? Behaviour Research and Therapy, 48, 1105-1112. [Study suggesting
MBCT is effective through the cultivation of mindfulness and self-compassion].
Lau, M. A., Segal, Z. V., & Williams, J. M. (2004). Teasdale's differential activation
hypothesis: implications for mechanisms of depressive relapse and suicidal behaviour.
Behaviour Research and Therapy, 42, 1001-1017.
Lewis, G. (2002). Sunbathing in the rain: A cheerful book about depression. London:
Flamingo, Harper Collins. {The perspective of someone who used mindfulness as an integral
part of her recovery from depression}
Miklowitz, D. J., Alatiq, Y., Goodwin, G. M., Geddes, J. R., Fennell, M. J. V.,
Dimidjian, S. et al. (2009). A Pilot Study of Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for
Bipolar Disorder. International Journal of Cognitive Therapy, 2, 373-382.
Miller, J. J., Fletcher, K., & Kabat-Zinn, J. (1995). 3-Year Follow-Up and Clinical
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Implications of A Mindfulness Mediation-Based Stress Reduction Intervention in the
Treatment of Anxiety Disorders. General Hospital Psychiatry, 17, 192-200.
Michalak, J., Heidenirich, T., Meibert, P., & Schulte, D. (2008). Mindfulness predicts
relapse/recurrence in major depressive disorder after mindfulness-based cognitive therapy.
Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 196, 630-633.
Nutely S, Walters I, Davies HTO: Using Evidence, How Research Can Inform Public
Services. Bristol: Policy Press; 2007.
*Piet, J., & Hougaard, E. (2011). The effect of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy
for prevention of relapse in recurrent major depressive disorder: A systematic review and
meta-analysis. Clinical Psychology Review, 31(6), 1032-1040. [Recent meta-analysis of all
MBCT trials].
Santorelli, S. (1999). Heal thy self, lessons of mindfulness in medicine. Bell Tower.
Segal, Z. V., Teasdale, J. D., Williams, J. M. G., & Gemar, M. C. (2002). The
mindfulness-based cognitive therapy adherence scale: Inter- rater reliability, adherence to
protocol and treatment distinctiveness. Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, 9, 131-138.
Segal, Z. V., Bieling, P., Young, T., MacQueen, G., Cooke, R., Martin, L. et al.
(2010). Antidepressant Monotherapy vs Sequential Pharmacotherapy and Mindfulness-Based
Cognitive Therapy, or Placebo, for Relapse Prophylaxis in Recurrent Depression. Archives of
General Psychiatry, 67, 1256-1264. [Key trial]
Shennan, C., Payne, S., & Fenlon, D. (2011). What is the evidence for the use of
mindfulness-based interventions in cancer care? A review. Psycho-Oncology, 20(7), 681-697.
Singh, N.N., Wahler, R.G., Adkins, A.D. & Myers R.E. (2003). Soles of the Feet: a
mindfulness-based self-control intervention for aggression by an individual with mild mental
retardation and mental illness. Research in Developmental Disabilities, 24, 158–169.
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Singh N.N., Lancioni, G.E., Winton, A.S.W., Wahler, R.G., Singh, J. & Sage M.
(2004). Mindful caregiving increases happiness among individuals with profound multiple
disabilities. Research in Developmental Disabilities, 25, 207–218.
Smith, A. (2004). Clinical uses of mindfulness training for older people. Behavioural
and Cognitive Psychotherapy, 32, 432-430.
Teasdale, J. D. (1999). Emotional processing, three modes of mind and the prevention
of relapse in depression. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 37, S53-S77.
Teasdale, J. D., Segal, Z. V., & Williams, J. M. G. (2003). Mindfulness training and
problem formulation. Clinical Psychology-Science and Practice, 10, 157-160.
Toneatto, T. & Nguyen, L. (2007). Does mindfulness meditation improve anxiety and
mood symptoms? A review of the controlled research. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry-Revue
Canadienne de Psychiatrie, 52, 260-266.
*Williams, J. M. G., Teasdale, J. D., Segal, Z. V., & Kabat-Zinn, J. (2007). The
Mindful Way Through Depression: Freeing Yourself from Chronic Unhappiness. New York:
Guildford Press. {Lay book describing MBCT with a CD of all the main practices}
Williams, J. M. G., Alatiq, Y., Crane, C., Barnhofer, T., Fennell, M. J. V., Duggan, D.
S. et al. (2008a). Mindfulness-based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) in bipolar disorder:
Preliminary evaluation of immediate effects on between-episode functioning. Journal of
Affective Disorders, 107, 275-279.
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Finding Peace in a Frantic World London, Piatkus & New York: Rodale.
There are two special issues of Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice which
have articles with commentaries on Mindfulness:
There is a special issue of Contemporary Buddhism that has papers on many facets of
mindfulness, MBSR and MBCT (some of the papers are in the list above).
Listserve
There is an interesting listserve for mindfulness practitioners and researchers that you can
sign up from at: http://listserv.kent.edu/cgi-bin/wa.exe?A0=mindfulness
The following are books and articles on mindfulness from a Buddhist (Insight
Meditation) perspective.
Bodhi, B. (1984). The noble eightfold path: Way to the end of suffering.
Onalalaska,WA: BPS Pariyatti Editions.
Brach, T. (2003). Radical Acceptance: Embracing Your Life with the Heart of a
Buddha. New York: Bantam.
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*Feldman, C. (1998). Meditation plain and simple. London: Harper Collins.
Feldman, C. (2005). Compassion: Listening to the Cries of the World. Berkeley, CA:
Rodmell Press.
His Holiness the Dalai Lama (2002). How to Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life.
London.
*Kabat-Zinn, J. (2004). Wherever you go, there you are. Piatkus Books.
*Kabat-Zinn, J. (2011). Some reflections on the origins of MBSR, skillful means, and
the trouble with maps. Contemporary Buddhism, 12(1), 281-306. [A key paper for situating
MBCT and MBSR in their context, and a personal and historical account from JKT].
*Thich Nhat Hahn (1975). The miracle of mindfulness. Boston: Beacon Press.
Thich Nhat Hanh (1991). Peace is every step: The path of mindfulness in everyday
life. New York: Bantam.
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