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Original Articles

Mindfulness Meditation for Substance Use Disorders: A Systematic Review

, , , , &
Pages 266-294 | Published online: 10 Nov 2009
 

ABSTRACT

Relapse is common in substance use disorders (SUDs), even among treated individuals. The goal of this article was to systematically review the existing evidence on mindfulness meditation-based interventions (MM) for SUDs. The comprehensive search for and review of literature found over 2000 abstracts and resulted in 25 eligible manuscripts (22 published, 3 unpublished: 8 randomized controlled trials, 7 controlled nonrandomized, 6 noncontrolled prospective, and 2 qualitative studies, and 1 case report). When appropriate, methodological quality, absolute risk reduction, number needed to treat, and effect size were assessed. Overall, although preliminary evidence suggests MM efficacy and safety, conclusive data for MM as a treatment of SUDs are lacking. Significant methodological limitations exist in most studies. Further, it is unclear which persons with SUDs might benefit most from MM. Future trials must be of sufficient sample size to answer a specific clinical question and should target both assessment of effect size and mechanisms of action.

This study was supported by grants from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (5T32 AA014845-A.Z., and K23 AA017508-A.Z.).

Notes

∗Adapted with permission from William Miller (personal communication, 2008) (Citation23).

∗ One nonrandomized controlled study did not use statistical analysis to compare results.

∗Since completion of this review, a report from this study has been published (Citation61).

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