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Clinical Trial Summary

Perceived loneliness causes a global health burden on older adults. Mindfulness training may be a feasible solution. Through our study, we expect that comprehensive and convincing neuroscientific evidence may support the efficacy underpinning mindfulness training in loneliness reduction.


Clinical Trial Description

In this aging and highly industrial society, elderly depression, particularly elderly loneliness, is a growing societal issue. Perceived loneliness not only causes tremendous suffering, disability, cognitive decline, and risk of dementia but also leads to increased mortality. Despite worldwide effort to solve the growing prevalence of loneliness in older adults, no single intervention stands out as universally effective and practical. The exact neural mechanism of loneliness and how the intervention against loneliness takes its effect in the brain remain unclear. Prior studies have indicated that perceived loneliness is associated with distorted cognition toward interpersonal interaction and heightened sympathetic nerve system.Mindfulness training is a discipline that the older adults in our society can readily relate to because the philosophy of mindfulness is similar to Buddhism. Mindfulness trains people to be aware of the surrounding environment and their presence in this environment. Combining the exercises of deep breathing and relaxation, one is taught to be aware of the emotion of oneself to regulate emotion. Mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR), a validated and systemized intervention, has been applied to the treatment of depression, anxiety, and insomnia. On the basis of the theory of mindfulness, the investigators estimate that mindfulness can reduce loneliness as well. Thus, the investigators aim to use MBSR in a group of older adults with depression to reduce loneliness. Our previous studies demonstrated that loneliness decreases the grey matter volume in reward system, disrupts the white matter structure, and heightens default-mode network activation. By combining a wearable device for sleep monitoring, heart rate variability measurement, and immune-related cytokine blood test, the investigators can associate these changes with clinical loneliness reduction and brain changes from magnetic resonance imaging. The investigators hope to validate MBSR as an effective intervention against loneliness and explore the supporting neural mechanism. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05620511
Study type Interventional
Source Chang Gung Memorial Hospital
Contact Che-min Lin, bachelor
Phone 0975366297
Email 8902008@cgmh.org.tw
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date August 1, 2020
Completion date July 31, 2023

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