Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repository.monashhealth.org/monashhealthjspui/handle/1/58219
Title: Meditation and workplace health: a systematic review and meta-analysis of mental and cardiometabolic outcomes among employees.
Authors: Khanal M.K.;Saunders P.;Nguyen K.;Hatmi M.A.;Asiri H.M.A.;Shahin W.;Millar R.;Karimi L.;de Courten B. 
Monash Health Department(s): Monash University - School of Clinical Sciences at Monash Health
Diabetes and Vascular Medicine
General Medicine
Institution: (Khanal, Saunders, Nguyen, Hatmi, Asiri, Shahin, Millar, Karimi, de Courten) School of Health and Biomedical Sciences, RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia
(de Courten) Department of Medicine, School of Clinical Sciences at Monash Health, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia
(de Courten) Department of Diabetes and Vascular Medicine and General Medicine, Monash Health, Clayton, Australia
Issue Date: 21-Apr-2026
Copyright year: 2026
Place of publication: United Kingdom
Publication information: Health psychology review. (pp 1-30), 2026. Date of Publication: 16 Apr 2026.
Journal: Health Psychology Review
Abstract: Employees are severely affected by psychological distress, poor cardiometabolic health, and reduced productivity. Meditation has emerged as a potential strategy to enhance overall health. This systematic review synthesised the effectiveness of meditation for improving employees' mental health and cardiometabolic risk (CMR) markers across 132 randomised controlled trials (145 intervention groups and 23,080 participants). Most interventions were Mindfulness and Transcendental Meditation, conducted in the USA, and targeting healthcare professionals and educators. Results showed that meditation significantly improved perceived stress (g = -0.51), distress (g = -0.49), job stress (g = -0.53), anxiety (g = -0.38), depression (g = -0.39), well-being (g = 0.41), resilience (g = 0.38), and sleep (g = -0.33), with most effects sustained within three-month follow-ups. Effects on perceived stress, distress, and well-being were sustained at long-term follow-up. Interventions did not show statistically significant differences in blood pressure, cortisol level, heart rate variability, or inflammatory markers. The findings require cautious interpretation due to moderate-to-substantial heterogeneity, high risk of bias, and limited CMR marker studies. The evidence certainty was moderate for well-being and sleep, and low to very low for the remaining outcomes.
DOI: http://monash.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17437199.2026.2652892
PubMed URL: 41987765
URI: https://repository.monashhealth.org/monashhealthjspui/handle/1/58219
Type: Article In Press
Subjects: anxiety
blood pressure
cardiometabolic risk
depression
distress syndrome
emotional stress
employee
health care personnel
heart rate variability
inflammation
job stress
meditation
mental health
mindfulness
physiological stress
transcendental meditation
workplace
hydrocortisone
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