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Journal Article

Citation

Garland EL, Howard MO. Addict. Sci. Clin. Pract. 2018; 13(1): e14.

Affiliation

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, U. S. National Institute on Drug Abuse)

DOI

10.1186/s13722-018-0115-3

PMID

29669599

Abstract

Contemporary advances in addiction neuroscience have paralleled increasing interest in the ancient mental training practice of mindfulness meditation as a potential therapy for addiction. In the past decade, mindfulness-based interventions (MBIs) have been studied as a treatment for an array addictive behaviors, including drinking, smoking, opioid misuse, and use of illicit substances like cocaine and heroin. This article reviews current research evaluating MBIs as a treatment for addiction, with a focus on findings pertaining to clinical outcomes and biobehavioral mechanisms. Studies indicate that MBIs reduce substance misuse and craving by modulating cognitive, affective, and psychophysiological processes integral to self-regulation and reward processing. This integrative review provides the basis for manifold recommendations regarding the next wave of research needed to firmly establish the efficacy of MBIs and elucidate the mechanistic pathways by which these therapies ameliorate addiction. Issues pertaining to MBI treatment optimization and sequencing, dissemination and implementation, dose-response relationships, and research rigor and reproducibility are discussed.


Language: en

Keywords

Addiction; Automaticity; Dissemination; Dose–response; Mindfulness; Review; Reward; SMART

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