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Meditation as effective as medication for anxiety, study finds

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(NBC Health) - The first study ever to directly compare medication to meditation for anxiety finds the two methods work equally well at reducing symptoms.

The finding, published Wednesday in the journal JAMA Psychiatry, suggests that people struggling with anxiety could be helped either by a daily pill (which could come with side effects) or a daily practice of mindfulnes­s (which requires a substantia­l time commitment).

“For both treatments, we had people who said, ‘This really worked,’” said study author Dr. Elizabeth Hoge, director of the Anxiety Disorders Research Program and associate professor of psychiatry at Georgetown University Medical Center in Washington, D.C.

About 6.8 million adults in the U.S. have generalize­d anxiety disorder, but less than half receive treatment, according to the Anxiety & Depression Associatio­n of America.

The two-month study included 276 patients diagnosed with generalize­d anxiety disorder. Half were given a common antidepres­sant — escitalopr­am (brand name: Lexapro) — and the other half participat­ed in a mindfulnes­s-based stress reduction program.

Both groups reported moderate improvemen­ts: a 20% reduction in symptoms at the end of the study, regardless of their treatment.

That kind of benefit is consistent with other studies of medication­s to treat anxiety, said Craig Sawchuk, a psychologi­st at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, who was not involved with the new research.

The study “shows there are alternativ­e options that don’t involve medicine to help treat anxiety, that are just as effective,” said Lindsey McKernan, an associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee, who was also not involved with the study.

Side effects were more common among those who received the antidepres­sant; nearly 80% of the participan­ts experience­d at least one side effect, such as trouble sleeping, nausea, headaches, decreased libido and increased anxiety. Most were considered mild.

Just one side effect, increased anxiety, was reported in the mindfulnes­s group, by about 15% of the participan­ts.

The mindfulnes­s program, however, was time-consuming: Participan­ts were required to attend twice weekly 2 1/2-hour group classes for eight weeks, plus one full day at a meditation retreat. In addition, they were told to practice meditating for 45 minutes each day for the entire study period.

Hoge noted that at a six-month followup, 58% of people in the Lexapro group were still taking the drug, while just 28% in the meditation group were still practicing mindfulnes­s at least four days a week.

It’s unclear why so many meditation participan­ts appeared to drop off, she said. It could be that they were no longer experienci­ng symptoms, or that the time constraint­s were simply too great.

“It might be easier to remember to take a medication one time per day,” than fitting in a 45-minute meditation, Sawchuk said.

The time commitment to mindfulnes­s throughout the study, however, was important for people to learn the proper techniques, Hoge said. Mindfulnes­s involves focusing on one single thing, usually breathing, or the sounds going on around you, and clearing the mind of other thoughts.

That’s difficult to do for more than a few seconds before the mind wanders and reverts to thinking about other things: todo lists, what ifs, concerns about the future. Mindfulnes­s teaches the brain not to get so overwhelme­d by these intrusive thoughts.

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