“I Learned to Let Go of My Pain”. The Effects of Mindfulness Meditation on Adolescents with Chronic Pain: An Analysis of Participants’ Treatment Experience
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Participant Recruitment Procedure
2.3. Intervention
2.4. Data Collection
2.4.1. Satisfaction Questionnaire
2.4.2. Focus Groups
2.5. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Participants
3.2. Qualitative Analysis
3.2.1. Mindfulness Skills
Present-Moment Awareness
Acceptance, Letting Go
Emotion Regulation
Positive Outlook
Transfer of Skills
Maintenance or Continuation of Skills
3.2.2. Supportive Environment
Safety and Trust
Emotional Support
Social Support
Disease-Related Support
3.2.3. Group Exercises
Likes and Dislikes
Recommendations for Changes to the Program
3.2.4. Empowerment
3.2.5. Program Expectations
3.2.6. Logistics
Environment/Setting
Scheduling
Population
3.3. Satisfaction Questionnaires
4. Discussion
4.1. Limitations
4.2. Future Directions
5. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Broad Question | Probing Follow-Up Question(s) |
---|---|
1. How did you feel the mindfulness group went? | What did you enjoy about it? What didn’t you enjoy about it? |
2. What skills do you think you gained from being in the mindfulness group? | Are you able to handle pain or stress differently than before you did the group? Did you use these skills for pain or other things in your life? (stress, anxiety, anger etc.) |
3. After doing the group, what does mindfulness mean to you? | N/A |
4. What did you like best about the program? | What were some of the good things that came out of the group? Were there some group activities/exercises that you really liked? Why? |
5. What did you like least about the program? | Were there any aspects of the group that you disliked or could be improved? Were there some group activities/exercises you really disliked? Why? |
6. What changes did you see in yourself as a result of being in the group? | Your response to stress? Pain? Upsetting situations? Being with other group members who have pain? |
7. The mindfulness group is designed to help not just with pain but with other things going on in your life. Keeping this in mind, over the past 8 weeks while you were in the group, what do you think led to the biggest amount of day-to-day stress in your lives—pain or other things? (stress, anxiety, anger etc.) | Was it mainly pain that was the hardest to deal with or was it stress/anxiety or other upsetting situations? |
8. How has the group helped you to cope with your pain? | Is there any activity or exercise that helped you cope a bit better with your pain? |
9. Did the group meet your expectations or was there something you would have hoped to get that you did not? | N/A |
10. How did the structure of the group work for you—days/times? | Can you think of any other models for the group that would have been more convenient? e.g., daily group for one week during the summer? Longer sessions/ more sessions? |
11. Do you have suggestions of things that could have been done to encourage your practice of mindfulness? | Do you think receiving texts or email alerts would be helpful? |
12. Is there anything that could have been done to make you feel safer to talk/share your experiences? | N/A |
13. Would you recommend the experience of being in the mindfulness group to another teen with pain? | If no, why not? If yes, why would you recommend it? |
14. How do you think you will keep mindfulness in your life after the group? | N/A |
15. Do you have any other comments that you would like to share with us about the group? | Positive/negative experiences? General thoughts and feelings about group? |
Theme | Sample Quotes |
---|---|
Mindfulness Skills | “[Mindfulness] is like being in the moment. You have to pay attention to the things around you. I used to be like a zombie at school, I would just walk through the halls and blindly follow my schedule and I never paid attention to things, I am even doing better in school now” (Participant, Fall group). “We acknowledge that [the pain] is there but it doesn’t control me, like it kinda has been… I’ve learned ways to not push away but see it’s there and continue with my daily life” (Participant, Fall group). “I don’t think [the mindfulness group] really helped much with the physical pain, more just with the emotional like having to constantly worry about it or overthinking it or stressing out about it. It helped a lot with the other stuff that pain brings with it” (Participant, Fall group). |
Support | “For the weather report, I was very conscious of what I said cause usually it was like a negative thing …so, I was trying to be conscious about it, but I was just, I was honest because I trusted everyone” (Participant, Fall group). “We didn’t feel bothersome by saying it all… because everyone could kinda relate to it” (Participant, Spring group). |
Group Exercises | “This whole group was based around a lot of exercises and just having so many different exercises was a really, really good way for all of us to find our own individual one that worked for ourselves” (Participant, Spring group). “The whole-body meditation…I didn’t like…it brings my attention to the pain and I am usually the type of person who distracts myself so it didn’t work out for me” (Participant, Spring group). |
Empowerment | “You are in a lot of pain and it was nice to try and just find a way to relax and when ice packs and heating won’t do. It is nice to try—it is a new aspect to look at” (Participant, Spring group). |
Program expectations | “A lot of the time through the hospital … what I am hearing when I come here, it’s like surgeons checking me and telling what I already know. In the mindfulness group I was learning something new and not expecting anything from the people who are teaching us, I just… didn’t know what to expect so it is kind of exciting” (Participant, Spring group). “[The mindfulness group] is good to meet people, but don’t expect it to affect your physical pain, ‘cause I really had like my expectations of that” (Participant, Fall group). |
Logistics | “I personally would like to have more sessions because 8 weeks is two months but now that we are at the end of two months it is just like … I don’t want to say goodbye” (Participant, Spring group). |
General Feedback | “I think actually like everyone in this group, each of them have brought something new to mindfulness like I think we all make it our own sort of, and sometimes people will come in and share how they used it but in a different situation so it kinda helped me learn what other people are doing too and different perceptions and concepts - so it took away from having other people teach me too as well as the therapist but all my friends too” (Participant, Fall group). |
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Characteristic | Results |
---|---|
Age, years, mean ± standard deviation (SD) | 15.8 ± 1.2 |
Gender, n (%) | |
Female | 16 (94%) |
Male | 1 (6%) |
Types of chronic pain, n (%) | |
Musculoskeletal | 10 (59%) |
Complex regional pain | |
Syndrome | 2 (12%) |
Abdominal | 1 (6%) |
Headache | 1 (6%) |
Pelvic | 1 (6%) |
Mixed 1 | 2 (12%) |
Duration of pain 2, months, mean ± SD | 33 ± 21 |
Theme | Subthemes | Adolescents (N = 19) | Exemplar Quotes |
---|---|---|---|
Social support |
| 12 (63%) | “Throughout this year I’ve been dealing with chronic pain. I’ve felt more alone than I ever have before. I thought nobody on Earth had what I have but I learned that I am not the only one” (Participant, Spring group, age 15) |
Mindfulness Skills |
| 12 (63%) | “I am going to use the meditation strategies that we used to help calm me down and try to ease my pain. I am going to spend more time being mindful when I am doing things like eating, showering or walking” (Participant, Fall group, age 15) |
Shift in Mindset |
| 9 (47%) | “Sometimes our minds intensify the pain but by taking control, those same minds can decrease it” (Participant, Spring group, age 15) |
Skills to Cope with Pain |
| 6 (32%) | “How to cope when my pain is uncounted” (Participant, Spring group, age 16) |
Pain Acceptance |
| 6 (32%) | “I am trying to understand that pain is a part of me now but it doesn’t make me or control me” (Participant, Fall group, age 17) |
© 2017 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Ruskin, D.; Harris, L.; Stinson, J.; Kohut, S.A.; Walker, K.; McCarthy, E. “I Learned to Let Go of My Pain”. The Effects of Mindfulness Meditation on Adolescents with Chronic Pain: An Analysis of Participants’ Treatment Experience. Children 2017, 4, 110. https://doi.org/10.3390/children4120110
Ruskin D, Harris L, Stinson J, Kohut SA, Walker K, McCarthy E. “I Learned to Let Go of My Pain”. The Effects of Mindfulness Meditation on Adolescents with Chronic Pain: An Analysis of Participants’ Treatment Experience. Children. 2017; 4(12):110. https://doi.org/10.3390/children4120110
Chicago/Turabian StyleRuskin, Danielle, Lauren Harris, Jennifer Stinson, Sara Ahola Kohut, Katie Walker, and Erinn McCarthy. 2017. "“I Learned to Let Go of My Pain”. The Effects of Mindfulness Meditation on Adolescents with Chronic Pain: An Analysis of Participants’ Treatment Experience" Children 4, no. 12: 110. https://doi.org/10.3390/children4120110
APA StyleRuskin, D., Harris, L., Stinson, J., Kohut, S. A., Walker, K., & McCarthy, E. (2017). “I Learned to Let Go of My Pain”. The Effects of Mindfulness Meditation on Adolescents with Chronic Pain: An Analysis of Participants’ Treatment Experience. Children, 4(12), 110. https://doi.org/10.3390/children4120110