E1 ReplicatedModerate confidencePEM not requiredRCTPeer-reviewedMachine draft
Standard · 3 min
Mindfulness and bodily distress.
Fjorback, Lone Overby · Danish medical journal · 2012
Quick Summary
This study tested whether mindfulness training (a mental technique focused on present-moment awareness) could help people with bodily distress syndrome—a condition with persistent physical symptoms that doctors cannot fully explain, which includes ME/CFS and fibromyalgia. Researchers compared mindfulness training combined with cognitive therapy to specialized medical treatment in 119 patients. Both treatments helped, but mindfulness therapy showed faster improvements and fewer patients needed disability pensions.
Why It Matters
This study directly addresses ME/CFS as part of the bodily distress syndrome spectrum and demonstrates that a structured, teachable mindfulness intervention can produce clinical and socioeconomic benefits without harm. The finding that mindfulness led to faster symptom improvement and reduced disability pension rates suggests a potentially cost-effective, accessible tool that patients can learn to support their own recovery.
Observed Findings
26% of mindfulness therapy patients reported marked improvement (>1 SD) at end of treatment compared to 10% in specialized treatment (OR=3.21, p=0.04).
Physical health scores improved significantly by end of treatment in the mindfulness group and remained improved at 15-month follow-up, while specialized treatment group showed improvement only at 15 months.
Only 25% of mindfulness therapy patients received disability pension at 15-month follow-up versus 45% in specialized treatment group (p=0.025).
Total healthcare utilization decreased in both groups from baseline year to year after treatment (mean $5,325 to $3,644, p=0.0001), with no difference between groups.
Inferred Conclusions
Mindfulness therapy combined with CBT appears to produce greater and more rapid symptom improvements in BDS patients than individualized specialized treatment alone.
Mindfulness therapy has substantial socioeconomic benefits, reducing disability pension dependence and potentially preventing social decline in chronically ill patients.
BDS patients are capable of and willing to engage in mindfulness practice, and this approach can be delivered safely in group formats.
Remaining Questions
Do the benefits of mindfulness therapy persist beyond 15 months, and is there durable improvement or continued practice required?
Which specific components of mindfulness practice (meditation, body awareness, acceptance, cognitive reframing) drive physical symptom improvement in BDS patients?
What This Study Does Not Prove
This study does not prove that mindfulness 'cures' ME/CFS or that symptoms are primarily psychological in origin. It compares two active treatments rather than mindfulness against placebo or no treatment, so we cannot determine how much benefit is specific to mindfulness versus general therapeutic attention. The study also does not establish mechanisms by which mindfulness improves physical outcomes, nor does it address whether improvements persist beyond 15 months.
Tags
Symptom:PainFatigue
Method Flag:PEM Not DefinedWeak Case DefinitionMixed Cohort
About the PEM badge: “PEM required” means post-exertional malaise was an explicit required diagnostic criterion for participant inclusion in this study — not that PEM was studied, observed, or discussed. Studies using criteria that do not require PEM (e.g. Fukuda, Oxford) are tagged “PEM not required”. How the atlas works →
How do mindfulness outcomes compare to other psychotherapeutic approaches, pharmacological treatments, or rehabilitation interventions in ME/CFS specifically?
Can mindfulness training prevent the onset of BDS or disability in at-risk populations, or is it effective only after symptoms are established?