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Study: Mindfulness in the workplace improves employee focus, attention, behaviour
POSTED 22 Mar 2016 . BY Jane Kitchen
The new study suggests that injecting a corporate culture of mindfulness not only improves focus, but the ability to manage stress and how employees work together Credit: Shutterstock/pathdoc
A new comprehensive analysis of mindfulness research, co-directed by a management scientist at Case Western Reserve University, suggests that injecting a corporate culture of mindfulness not only improves focus, but the ability to manage stress and how employees work together.

“Historically, companies have been reticent to offer mindfulness training because it was seen as something fluffy, esoteric and spiritual,” said Christopher Lyddy, an organisational behaviour doctoral candidate at Case Western Reserve’s Weatherhead School of Management. “But that’s changing.”

Mindfulness, defined as present-centred attention and awareness, emerged from Buddhist philosophy and has been cultivated for millennia through meditation practices.

Organisations such as Google, Aetna, Mayo Clinic and the United States Marine Corps use mindfulness training to improve workplace functioning. The results of this latest research indicate the approach can improve a range of workplace functions.

“When you are mindful, you can have a greater consciousness in the present,” Lyddy said. “That’s vital for any executive or manager, who, at any given moment, may be barraged with various problems that call for decisions under stress.”

Lyddy is co-lead author of the research with Darren Good, who earned his doctorate at the Weatherhead School and is now an assistant professor at Pepperdine University’s Graziadio School of Business and Management. They headed an interdisciplinary team that included experts in both management and mindfulness, as well as psychologists and neuroscientists.

The researchers considered 4,000 scientific papers on various aspects of mindfulness, distilling the information into an accessible guide documenting the impact mindfulness has on how people think, feel, act, relate and perform at work.

Their findings, ‘Contemplating Mindfulness at Work (An Integrative Review),’ are recently published in the Journal of Management.

“Remarkably, scientists have found the effects of mindfulness consistently benign,” Lyddy said. “Of the thousands of empirical studies we read, only two reported any downside to mindfulness.”

A small but growing body of work in the management area suggests mindfulness is linked to better workplace functioning.

Among the new study’s conclusions:
• Mindfulness appears to positively impact human functioning overall. Research in such disciplines as psychology, neuroscience and medicine provide a wealth of evidence that mindfulness improves attention, cognition, emotions, behavior and physiology.
• Specifically, mindfulness has been shown to improve three qualities of attention—stability, control and efficiency. The human mind is estimated to wander roughly half of our waking hours, but mindfulness can stabilise attention in the present. Individuals who completed mindfulness training were shown to remain vigilant longer on both visual and listening tasks.
• Although mindfulness is an individual quality, initial evidence suggests that it affects interpersonal behaviour and workgroup relationships.
• Mindfulness may improve relationships through greater empathy and compassion—suggesting mindfulness training could enhance workplace processes that rely on effective leadership and teamwork.

Lyddy said the research indicating significant and diverse benefits of mindfulness coincides with growing practical interest in mindfulness training nationally and worldwide.

The Global Wellness Institute recently released its study on workplace wellness, which suggests that whether employees consider their companies to be genuinely caring about their wellness is key to boosting worker health and productivity.
RELATED STORIES
  Everyday mindfulness linked to healthy glucose levels


Researchers at Brown University in the US have found that people with higher scores for dispositional mindfulness – the inherent trait of being aware of one’s present thoughts and feelings – are significantly more likely than people with low scores to have healthy glucose levels.
  Mindfulness meditation shown to reduce pain: study


Scientists at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center in North Carolina, US, have found new evidence that mindfulness meditation reduces pain.
  Study to assess effectiveness of mindfulness in teenagers


A large-scale trial in the UK will assess whether mindfulness training for teenagers can improve their mental health.
  Nuffield Health bidding to bring mindfulness to the workplace


UK healthcare organisation Nuffield Health has teamed up with Mindlab to develop a new corporate mindfulness training programme for businesses to optimise employee performance and build emotional resilience.
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NEWS
Study: Mindfulness in the workplace improves employee focus, attention, behaviour
POSTED 22 Mar 2016 . BY Jane Kitchen
The new study suggests that injecting a corporate culture of mindfulness not only improves focus, but the ability to manage stress and how employees work together Credit: Shutterstock/pathdoc
A new comprehensive analysis of mindfulness research, co-directed by a management scientist at Case Western Reserve University, suggests that injecting a corporate culture of mindfulness not only improves focus, but the ability to manage stress and how employees work together.

“Historically, companies have been reticent to offer mindfulness training because it was seen as something fluffy, esoteric and spiritual,” said Christopher Lyddy, an organisational behaviour doctoral candidate at Case Western Reserve’s Weatherhead School of Management. “But that’s changing.”

Mindfulness, defined as present-centred attention and awareness, emerged from Buddhist philosophy and has been cultivated for millennia through meditation practices.

Organisations such as Google, Aetna, Mayo Clinic and the United States Marine Corps use mindfulness training to improve workplace functioning. The results of this latest research indicate the approach can improve a range of workplace functions.

“When you are mindful, you can have a greater consciousness in the present,” Lyddy said. “That’s vital for any executive or manager, who, at any given moment, may be barraged with various problems that call for decisions under stress.”

Lyddy is co-lead author of the research with Darren Good, who earned his doctorate at the Weatherhead School and is now an assistant professor at Pepperdine University’s Graziadio School of Business and Management. They headed an interdisciplinary team that included experts in both management and mindfulness, as well as psychologists and neuroscientists.

The researchers considered 4,000 scientific papers on various aspects of mindfulness, distilling the information into an accessible guide documenting the impact mindfulness has on how people think, feel, act, relate and perform at work.

Their findings, ‘Contemplating Mindfulness at Work (An Integrative Review),’ are recently published in the Journal of Management.

“Remarkably, scientists have found the effects of mindfulness consistently benign,” Lyddy said. “Of the thousands of empirical studies we read, only two reported any downside to mindfulness.”

A small but growing body of work in the management area suggests mindfulness is linked to better workplace functioning.

Among the new study’s conclusions:
• Mindfulness appears to positively impact human functioning overall. Research in such disciplines as psychology, neuroscience and medicine provide a wealth of evidence that mindfulness improves attention, cognition, emotions, behavior and physiology.
• Specifically, mindfulness has been shown to improve three qualities of attention—stability, control and efficiency. The human mind is estimated to wander roughly half of our waking hours, but mindfulness can stabilise attention in the present. Individuals who completed mindfulness training were shown to remain vigilant longer on both visual and listening tasks.
• Although mindfulness is an individual quality, initial evidence suggests that it affects interpersonal behaviour and workgroup relationships.
• Mindfulness may improve relationships through greater empathy and compassion—suggesting mindfulness training could enhance workplace processes that rely on effective leadership and teamwork.

Lyddy said the research indicating significant and diverse benefits of mindfulness coincides with growing practical interest in mindfulness training nationally and worldwide.

The Global Wellness Institute recently released its study on workplace wellness, which suggests that whether employees consider their companies to be genuinely caring about their wellness is key to boosting worker health and productivity.
RELATED STORIES
Everyday mindfulness linked to healthy glucose levels


Researchers at Brown University in the US have found that people with higher scores for dispositional mindfulness – the inherent trait of being aware of one’s present thoughts and feelings – are significantly more likely than people with low scores to have healthy glucose levels.
Mindfulness meditation shown to reduce pain: study


Scientists at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center in North Carolina, US, have found new evidence that mindfulness meditation reduces pain.
Study to assess effectiveness of mindfulness in teenagers


A large-scale trial in the UK will assess whether mindfulness training for teenagers can improve their mental health.
Nuffield Health bidding to bring mindfulness to the workplace


UK healthcare organisation Nuffield Health has teamed up with Mindlab to develop a new corporate mindfulness training programme for businesses to optimise employee performance and build emotional resilience.
MORE NEWS
Preidlhof Luxury DolceVita Resort to unveil new spa in February 2027
Preidlhof Luxury DolceVita Resort, a destination resort and spa in Naturno, South Tyrol in Italy, will reveal a new spa in February 2027, which has been designed by wellness expert and consultant Patrizia Bortolin.
ISPA launches on-demand customer experience course by Dan Gingiss
The International Spa Association (ISPA) has launched a course by customer experience expert Dan Gingiss on its iLearn platform.
Virgin Active opens social wellness club in London's Mayfair
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MSpa Oslo series: a timeless bestseller
The MSpa Oslo series is a perennial bestseller in global markets. With innovative engineering and premium performance, this completely portable spa line-up is expertly designed to meet the needs of customers worldwide. [more...]

Glow beyond protection: meet Comfort Zone Hydramemory Hybrid Glow SPF 30
Sun protection is no longer just about shielding the skin – it's about enhancing it. [more...]
+ More featured suppliers  
COMPANY PROFILES
AKT Group

AKT Group is the Franco–Italian parent company of SKYY, C.O.D.E. and AKTMe, operating as an integrat [more...]
+ More profiles  
CATALOGUE GALLERY
+ More catalogues  

DIRECTORY
+ More directory  
DIARY

 

03-05 Jul 2026

World Championship in Massage

Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark
23-26 Aug 2026

Elevate Spa Riviera Maya Edition

The Riviera Maya Edition Kanai, Playa del Carmen, Mexico
+ More diary  
 


ADVERTISE . CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2026

ABOUT LEISURE MEDIA
LEISURE MEDIA MAGAZINES
LEISURE MEDIA HANDBOOKS
LEISURE MEDIA WEBSITES
LEISURE MEDIA PRODUCT SEARCH
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FREE DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTIONS