Abstract
Mindfulness has its roots in Eastern contemplative traditions and is rapidly gaining popularity in Western psychology. However, questions remain regarding the validity of Western operationalizations of mindfulness. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to assess the applicability of several Western mindfulness measures among a sample of Thai Theravāda Buddhist monks. Twenty-four monks recruited from Buddhist temples in Thailand participated in the study. The monks evinced similar associations between mindfulness and related variables as American validation study samples did, and on two facets of mindfulness the monks’ mean scores were greater than an American college student sample. However, the American sample endorsed significantly higher scores on three other facets of mindfulness. These results raise concerns about whether these scales are measuring mindfulness as it is conceptualized in a Buddhist context. Future research with larger samples is needed to further assess the cultural validity and measurement equivalence of Western mindfulness measures across cultural groups.
Notes
Note
1. Baer, Smith, Hopkins, Krietemeyer, and Toney (Citation2006) recently developed another self-report measure of mindfulness skills entitled the Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire (FFMQ). The FFMQ consists of items from several mindfulness scales, including the KIMS, CAMS, FMI, and MAAS. Items for the FFMQ were selected on the basis of a factor analysis. The FFMQ is composed of the four KIMS mindfulness factors in addition to a fifth factor entitled Nonreactivity to Inner Experience. Baer et al. (Citation2006) continue to promote the utility of the KIMS in measuring four of the five identified mindfulness facets at the present stage of research. When we began data collection in the present study, only the original four-factor KIMS was available.