Veterans Like Meditation
and acupuncture
Meditation, imagery, acupuncture, and yoga are the most
frequently offered mind and body practices in the Department of Veterans
Affairs. Yet, the research on mind and body practices has been critiqued as
being too limited in evidence and scope to inform clinical treatment. We
conducted a systematic scoping review of mind and body practices used with
veterans or active duty military personnel to identify gaps in the literature
and make recommendations for future primary research. Following systematic
literature review methodology, we searched 5 databases using 27 different
National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine-defined mind and
body practices as text words, keywords, and MeSH terms through June 30, 2014.
We also conducted handsearches of 4 previous reviews. Active duty military
members or veterans 18 years or older participating in mind and body practice
interventions globally. Data were extracted from studies meeting 5 inclusion
criteria. The quality of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) was assessed using
an existing checklist. Of 1819 studies identified, 89 interventions (50 RCTs)
published between 1976 and 2014, conducted in 9 countries, using 152 different
measures to assess 65 health and well-being outcomes met our inclusion
criteria. Most interventions took place in the United States (n=78). Meditation
practices (n=25), relaxation techniques including imagery (n=20), spinal
manipulation including physical therapy (n=16), and acupuncture (n=11) were the
most frequently studied practices. Methodological quality of most RCTs was
rated poorly. Meditation and acupuncture practices are among the most
frequently offered and studied mind and body practices. Future research should
include yoga as it is currently understudied among veterans and military
personnel. A repository of mind and body intervention outcome measures may
further future research efforts, as would conducting pragmatic trials and more
robust RCTs.
Source: Rani Elwy A,
Johnston JM,
Bormann JE,
Hull A,
Taylor SL.
A systematic
scoping review of complementary and alternative medicine mind and body
practices to improve the health of veterans and military personnel. Med Care.
2014 Dec;52 Suppl 5:S70-82.
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