A Critical Review and 10-Year Update on Prospects for a Clinical Science of Mindfulness-Based Intervention
摘要
Over the past decade, research on mindfulness-based interventions (MBIs) has expanded exponentially. A decade ago, Dimidjian and Segal (2015) used the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Stage Model to assess the state of the science and identify key issues limiting public health impact. The present review provided a ten-year update on the field’s progress, applying the same framework to studies published between 2014 and 2025.
MethodSearching PubMed and PsycINFO identified 1,226 empirical studies of Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT), Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR), and their adaptations that were categorized by NIH Stage.
ResultsOf the included studies, 41% were classified as Stage 1, 54% as Stage 2 or 3, 3% as Stage 4, and 2% as Stage 5. Compared to the prior review, the proportion of later-stage studies modestly increased, and attention to mechanisms and real-world implementation expanded substantially. Nonetheless, most MBI research remains concentrated in early stages, and Stage 4–5 studies focused on effectiveness, dissemination, and implementation remain rare.
ConclusionsTaken together, this 10-year update depicts a field that has strengthened its methodological rigor and broadened its scope, yet still faces the challenge of translating efficacy into large-scale public health impact. Continued progress will require coordinated research across all stages of the NIH Stage Model and learning from advances in related areas of study to integrate basic, clinical, and implementation science into a clinical science of mindfulness-based interventions.