Mindfulness training improves employee well-being: A randomized controlled trial.

Jeremiah Slutsky, Brian Chin, Julianna Raye, John David Creswell
Author Information
  1. Jeremiah Slutsky: Department of Psychology, University of South Florida.
  2. Brian Chin: Department of Psychology, Carnegie Mellon University.
  3. Julianna Raye: Unified Mindfulness.
  4. John David Creswell: Department of Psychology, Carnegie Mellon University.

Abstract

Organizations are turning toward behavioral interventions with the aim of improving employee well-being and job performance. Mindfulness training has been suggested as one type of intervention that can achieve these goals, but few active treatment randomized controlled trials have been conducted. We conducted a randomized controlled trial among employees of a midwestern marketing firm (n = 60) that compared the effects of 6-week mindfulness training program with that of a half-day mindfulness training seminar comparison program on employee well-being outcomes. Although both groups improved comparably on job productivity, the 6-week mindfulness training group had significantly greater improvement in attentional focus at work and decreases in work-life conflict, as well as a marginal improvement in job satisfaction compared with the half-day seminar comparison group. These findings suggest that although small doses of mindfulness training may be sufficient to foster increased perceptions of job productivity, longer term mindfulness training programs are needed to improve focus, job satisfaction, and a positive relationship to work. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).

MeSH Term

Adult
Attention
Female
Humans
Job Satisfaction
Male
Middle Aged
Mindfulness
Multilevel Analysis
Ohio
Smartphone
Surveys and Questionnaires
Treatment Outcome
Work Performance
Work-Life Balance
Workplace
Young Adult

Word Cloud

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