Mantram Repitition Program (MRP)

Mantram Repitition Program (MRP)

In this study, the authors determined the effect of a structured Internet-delivered Mantram Repetition Program (MRP) on burnout and stress of conscience (SOC), stress related to ambiguity from ethical or moral conflicts among health care workers (HCWs) within the Veteran Affairs (VA) Healthcare System. A secondary purpose was to determine whether practicing meditation prior to the study combined with MRP affected burnout or SOC. The MRP teaches the mindful practices of repeating a mantram, slowing down, and one-pointed attention for managing stress. Thirty-nine HCW volunteers who provided direct patient care completed the Internet-delivered MRP.

The outcomes of burnout (i.e., exhaustion, cynicism, and professional efficacy) and SOC (i.e., frequency of stressful events and troubled conscience about those events) were measured at baseline (T1), postintervention (T2), and 3-months postintervention (T3). Repeated measures ANOVA indicated that exhaustion significantly (p < .05) declined between T1 and T3; professional efficacy and cynicism did not change during the study. The same statistical model also indicated the frequency of stressful events significantly declined between T1 and T2 and troubled conscience declined between T1 and T3. Secondary analysis demonstrated that individuals who did not practice meditation at baseline (n = 16, 41%) significantly decreased exhaustion, frequency of stressful events, and troubled conscience between T1 and T3, and improved professional efficacy between T1 and T2. Individuals who practiced meditation at baseline (n = 23, 59%) did not demonstrate significant change on any study outcomes. An MRP intervention may reduce burnout and SOC in those individuals who are naïve to practicing meditation.

Rank: 39
First Author: Leary
Outcome: Stress,Burnout,Mindfulness
Outcome p-value: Stress:⭑, Burnout:⭑, Mindfulness:●
Intervention Category: Mindfulness
Time per Employee (hours): 5
Hours per Employee: 5
D&B Study Quality Rating: 18
Reviewer Confidence: 2
Country: US
Study Design Type: Quasi-experimental
Materials Available to Implement: Intervention outlined in publication. There is a downloadable training manual at reference: Strength in the Storm (Easwaran, 2013); Tomales,CA (Nilgiri Press). The intervention is available through PsychArmor Institute. To access these programs, create an account and password, then do a search on “Mantram” to find: ⭑4 Self-Learning Mantram Modules. https://psycharmor.org/courses/mantram/. Corresponding author: email: rtopp@sandiego.edu
Materials Available: yes
Organiz./Individ. Focus: Individual
Prevention Category: Secondary
Effect size Small:
Effect size Medium:
Reference: Leary, S., Weingart, K., Topp, R., & Bormann, J. (2018). The Effect of Mantram Repetition on Burnout and Stress Among VA Staff. Workplace Health & Safety, 66(3), 120–128. https://doi.org/10.1177/2165079917697215