Author: Trent NL1, Borden S1, Miraglia M1, Pasalis E1, Dusek JA1, Khalsa SBS2
Affiliation: <sup>1</sup>Department of Research, Kripalu Center for Yoga & Health, Stockbridge, Massachusetts.
<sup>2</sup>Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
Conference/Journal: Glob Adv Health Med.
Date published: 2019 Jun 11
Other:
Volume ID: 8 , Pages: 2164956119856856 , Special Notes: doi: 10.1177/2164956119856856. eCollection 2019. , Word Count: 261
Objective: The purpose of this study was to examine changes in psychological and occupational well-being in education professionals who attended a yoga-based program.
Methods: Education professionals who attended a 3-day yoga-based RISE (resilience, integration, self-awareness, engagement) program were recruited to participate. RISE was administered at the Kripalu Center for Yoga & Health. Measures of psychological and occupational well-being, and health-related behaviors were completed before (baseline), after (post), and 2 months after RISE (follow-up). Forty-four participants completed baseline and post and were included in the analysis. Of those, 33 participants also completed the follow-up. Paired samples t tests were used to compare scores between time points.
Results: Compared to baseline, at post, participants showed improvements in perceived stress, mindfulness, empowerment, positive affect, negative affect, self-compassion, total work engagement, vigor, sleep quality (all P values < .001), resilience, satisfaction with life, as well as exhaustion and professional efficacy which are dimensions of burnout (all P values < .01). At the follow-up, significant improvements were maintained for mindfulness, empowerment, self-compassion, sleep quality (all P values < .001), resilience, vigor, and exhaustion (all P values < .01) and positive affect, satisfaction with life, and work engagement (all P values < .05).
Conclusions: These findings suggest that the yoga-based RISE program improves psychological and occupational well-being in education professionals. In addition, participants reported that attending RISE was feasible, they could continue using RISE practices long-term, shared them with work colleagues, and reported that RISE positively impacted both their daily lives and workplace environment. With these promising results, additional controlled research is warranted.
KEYWORDS: educators; health; mindfulness; psychological; resilience; yoga
PMID: 31218118 PMCID: PMC6563397 DOI: 10.1177/2164956119856856