Keywords

diabetes mellitus, type 2, meditation, meta-analysis, systematic review, self-management

 

Authors

  1. Heo, Seongkum PhD, RN
  2. Kang, JungHee PhD, MPH, RN
  3. Umeakunne, Erica MSN, MPH, PhD(c), APRN
  4. Lee, Sohye PhD, RN
  5. Bertulfo, Tara F. DNP, RN, WHNP, CNE
  6. Barbe, Tammy PhD, RN
  7. Kim, JinShil PhD, RN
  8. Black, Vicki PhD, RN, CNE
  9. An, Minjeong PhD, RN
  10. Randolph, Justus PhD

Abstract

Background: Diabetes complications are prevalent and cause adverse effects on the physical, psychological, and economic status of adult patients with type 2 diabetes. Meditation may positively affect self-management and, in turn, reduce diabetes complications. However, the systematic examination of the effects of meditation without additional components on self-management in this population have been rarely examined.

 

Purpose: The aim of this study was to examine the effects of meditation interventions on self-management (ie, control of glucose, blood pressure, cholesterol, and obesity and self-management) among adult patients with type 2 diabetes in randomized controlled trials.

 

Methods: In this systematic review and meta-analysis, 6 electronic databases were searched using major keywords of meditation, diabetes, and self-management during March 2022.

 

Results: Eight studies (9 articles) using mindfulness-based meditation were included. The meta-analysis showed that meditation improved hemoglobin A1c (effect size = -0.75; 95% confidence interval, -1.30 to -0.21; P = .007) but not fasting blood glucose. Only a few studies examined meditation effects on other types of self-management (eg, blood pressure, body mass index, cholesterol, diet, exercise, foot care, and monitoring of blood glucose), and the effects were inconsistent. In 1 study, meditation improved diabetes self-management.

 

Conclusions: Mindfulness-based meditation reduced hemoglobin A1c levels in adult patients with type 2 diabetes but did not consistently improve other types of self-management in a few studies examined. This may imply the need for additional intervention components to improve different types of self-management. Further studies are needed to examine the effects of different types of meditations with additional components on different types of self-management.