How to bring health and happiness to your lab
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Can mindfulness, meditation and other tools designed to boost well-being make a difference? Adam Levy investigates
Adam Levy investigates meditation, mindfulness and other tools to boost well-being in the lab.
Download MP3See transcriptRelentlessly pursuing perfection in science can mean that researchers are in perpetual and self-critical ‘survival mode,’ forever questioning their behaviours and actions in the workplace, says clinical psychologist Desiree Dickerson.
“We are not very good at taking the spotlight off ourselves, a pressure that can lead to burnout other mental health problems, adds Dickerson, who is based in Valencia, Spain.
To boost workplace well-being, Ellen Wehrens describes the impact of a happiness programme that was introduced in 2019 to her lab at the Princess Máxima paediatric oncology centre in Utrecht, the Netherlands. The programme includes both a buddying system and a colour-coded index that enables individuals to signal to colleagues how they are feeling. “So green, you are doing great, yellow, not so much, and red, you are not doing well,” explains Wehrens.
Ana Pineda, an ecologist who now runs I focus and write, an education and coaching business, says she began practicing yoga and meditation after feeling stressed in her research career. Alongisde these pursuits, she also enlisted the support of friends and colleagues, describing them as important “angels” to be sought out.
Meditation, she adds, enables her to find joy, even when faced with daunting tasks.
This episode is the penultimate one in Mind Matters, an eight-part podcast series on mental health and wellbeing in academia.
doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-025-00538-w
This story originally appeared on: Nature - Author:Adam Levy