Antelope Valley Press

Mindfulnes­s worked as well for anxiety as drug in study

- By LINDSEY TANNER AP Medical Writer

Mindfulnes­s meditation worked as well as a standard drug for treating anxiety in the first head-to-head comparison.

The study tested a widely used mindfulnes­s program that includes two-and-a-half hours of classes weekly and 45 minutes of daily practice at home. Participan­ts were randomly assigned to the program or daily use of a generic drug sold under the brand name Lexapro for depression and anxiety.

After two months, anxiety as measured on a severity scale declined by about 30% in both groups and continued to decrease during the following four months.

Study results, published, Wednesday, in the journal JAMA Psychiatry, are timely. In September, an influentia­l US health task force recommende­d routine anxiety screening for adults, and numerous reports suggest global anxiety rates have increased recently, related to worries over the pandemic, political and racial unrest, climate change and financial uncertaint­ies.

Anxiety disorders include social anxiety, generalize­d anxiety and panic attacks. Affected people are troubled by persistent and intrusive worries that interfere with their lives and relationsh­ips. In the US, anxiety disorders affect 40% of US women at some point in their lives and more than 1 in 4 men, according to data cited in US Preventive Services Task Force screening recommenda­tions.

Mindfulnes­s is a form of meditation that emphasizes focusing only on what’s happening at the moment and dismissing intrusive thoughts. Sessions often start with breathing exercises. Next might be “body scans” — thinking about each body part systematic­ally, head to toe. When worried thoughts intrude, participan­ts learn to briefly acknowledg­e them but then dismiss them.

Instead of ruminating over the troubling thought, “You say, ‘I’m having this thought, let that go for now,’ ’’ said lead author Elizabeth Hoge, director of Georgetown University’s Anxiety Disorders Research Program. With practice, “It changes the relationsh­ip people have with their own thoughts when not meditating.”

Previous studies have shown mindfulnes­s works better than no treatment or at least as well as education or more formal behavior therapy in reducing anxiety, depression and other mental woes. But this is the first study to test it against a psychiatri­c drug, Hoge said, and the results could make insurers more likely to cover costs, which can run $300 to $500 for an eight-week session.

The results were based on about 200 adults who completed the sixmonth study at medical centers in Washington, Boston and New York. Researcher­s used a psychiatri­c scale of 1 to 7, with the top number reflecting severe anxiety. The average score was about 4.5 for participan­ts before starting treatment. It dropped to about 3 after two months, then dipped slightly in both groups at three months and six months. Hoge said the change was clinically meaningful, resulting in noticeable improvemen­t in symptoms.

Ten patients on the drug dropped out because of troublesom­e side effects possibly related to treatment, which included insomnia, nausea and fatigue. There were no dropouts for that reason in the mindfulnes­s group, although 13 patients reported increased anxiety.

The study “is reaffirmin­g about how useful mindfulnes­s can be when practiced effectivel­y,’’ said psychologi­st Sheehan Fisher, an associate professor at Northweste­rn University’s Feinberg School of Medicine who was not involved in the study.

Dr. Scott Krakower, a psychiatri­st at Zucker Hillside Hospital in New York, said mindfulnes­s treatments often work best for mildly anxious patients. He prescribes them with medication for patients with more severe anxiety.

He noted that many people feel they don’t have time for mindfulnes­s meditation, especially in-person sessions like those studied. Whether similar results would be found with online training or phone apps is unknown, said Krakower, who also had no role in the study.

Olga Cannistrar­o, a freelance writer in Keene, New Hampshire, participat­ed in an earlier mindfulnes­s study led by Hoge and says it taught her “to intervene in my own state of mind.’’

During a session, just acknowledg­ing that she was feeling tension anywhere in her body helped calm her, she said.

Cannistrar­o, 52, has generalize­d anxiety disorder and has never taken medication for it. She was a single mom working in sales during that earlier study — circumstan­ces that made life particular­ly stressful, she said. She has since married, switched jobs, and feels less anxious though still uses mindfulnes­s techniques.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? A woman meditates on the beach in Miami Beach, Fla. According to a study published, Wednesday, in the journal JAMA Psychiatry, mindfulnes­s meditation worked as well as a standard drug for treating anxiety in the first head-to-head comparison.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES A woman meditates on the beach in Miami Beach, Fla. According to a study published, Wednesday, in the journal JAMA Psychiatry, mindfulnes­s meditation worked as well as a standard drug for treating anxiety in the first head-to-head comparison.

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