A new meta-study released today reports the difficulty in drawing conclusions about the efficacy of meditation practices, inlcluding mindfulness.
With the headline of "Meditation Won't Boost Health: Study," the media immediately gets it wrong. Scientific research cannot say something "can't" be done; good research reports that there is no strong connection between two factors.
The meta-study, conducted by Maria Ospina and Kenneth Bond of the University of Alberta/Capital Health Evidence-based Practice Centre, in Edmonton reviewed a number of studies into meditation and took other researchers to task for essentially designing flawed studies.
Personally, I am convinced of the importance of meditation training. While it certainly is not a magical cure-all, I am certain that once meditation is studied under rigorous scientific conditions, it's impact will be validated.
I applaud the Evidence-based Practice Centre for pushing the boundaries of scientific studies forward!
Showing posts with label maria ospina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label maria ospina. Show all posts
Friday, July 13, 2007
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)