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SQU Journal For
Scientific Research:
Medical Sciences 2001,
vol: 3, no: 2, 87–92
©Sultan Qaboos University
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Vipassana meditation:
A naturalistic, preliminary observation in Muscat
Ala’Aldin Al-Hussaini1, Atsu S.S. Dorvlo2,
Sajjeev X. Antony1
Dhananjay Chavan3, Jitu Dave3, Vimal Purecha3,
Samia Al-Rahbi1, *Samir Al-Adawi1
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1 Department of Behavioural Medicine, College of
Medicine, Sultan Qaboos University, P.O. Box: 35, Al-Khod 123, Muscat,
Sultanate of Oman. 2Department of Mathematics and Statistics,
College of Science, Sultan Qaboos University, P.O.Box: 36, Al-Khod 123,
Muscat, Sultanate of Oman. 3Vipassana
Research Institute, Igatpuri-422 403, Dist. Nashik, Maharashtra,
India.
*To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail:
adawi@squ.edu.om

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ABSTRACT:
Objectives: To assess the effects
of Vipassana meditation on the physical and psychological health in a
multi-ethnic population in the city of Muscat. Method: The
subjects were participants of a Vipassana meditation course taught in a
ten-day residential retreat. Self-assessments of health-related parameters
and physical and psychological symptomatology were collected from them
before and immediately after the course. A control group was tested for a
similar time interval. Results: Immediately after their
10-day training, the Vipassana participants assessed themselves
significantly higher than their levels prior to the course,
suggesting that the 10 days’ practice had significantly improved their
physical and psychological well-being. The control group did not exhibit
such changes. Conclusion: The present preliminary findings,
juxtaposed with the results of studies from other parts of the world,
suggest that the practice of Vipassana meditation may help mitigate
psychological and psychosomatic distress. |
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Vipassana,
which means to see things as they really are, is an ancient
technique to improve concentration and self-awareness through meditation.
The theory and philosophy of Vipassana have been extensively reviewed
elsewhere.1–3
Vipassana seeks self
transformation through self observation, where the meditator pays
disciplined attention to the physical sensations that continuously
interact with and condition the mind.3,4 Being an ancient
technique, many schools of Vipassana—both sectarian and non-sectarian—have
evolved. Prominent among the non-sectarian approaches is the one
adopted by S.N.Goenka and Assistant Teachers in their ten-day residential
courses conducted in many countries including UAE and Oman.3–6
One of their courses conducted in Oman provided data for this study.
Vipassana’s observation-based journey to the common root
of mind and body is expected to reduce the tendency of the mind to dwell
on the past (thereby reducing regrets), or to delve into the future (thus
lowering expectations and anxieties), helping the participant to remain in
the ‘here and now’ and achieve relative mental tranquillity.1,3,4,7,8
Both traditional and clinical literature suggest that Vipassana practice
increases awareness, promotes integration of subjective experience and
facilitates acceptance and tolerance to sufficiently reduce physical and
psychological distress.2,3 With the advent of invasive
measurement tools, there is also evidence that changes reported from
non-invasive assessment measures are accompanied by altered physiological
parameters.9
If a technique has universal application, then it ought to
transcend cultural barriers and show its efficacy in all populations.
Studies in the West on meditative techniques akin to Vipassana have
demonstrated enhancement in functional status, and physical and mental
well-being in practitioners.10 Studies in Asia have also
reported similarly.2,6,7
Among the most intriguing
of these cross-cultural studies have been the ones conducted among
prisoners where Vipassana meditation reportedly improved the inmates’ mood
and behaviour. 2, 6, 11
There is a need for the quantification of the relevance of
these health-promoting techniques in other regions of the world,
especially in the Middle East.12 Lack of reports from the Arab
world prompted the need for testing the effect of Vipassana meditation on
the health-related quality of life and physical and psychological
symptomatology in the residents of this region. The present study was
therefore designed to test the hypothesis that Vipassana training could
improve the health-related quality and impact on physical and
psychological symptomatology in a multiethnic population like that in
Oman.
METHOD
Design
The study constituted a naturalistic experiment
with 14 Vipassana participants who were voluntarily attending a ten-day
residential meditation course in Muscat, Oman, during July 2001. The
participants were tested twice, once at the beginning of the 10-day course
and thereafter upon completion of the course. The control group consisted
of 31 students of Sultan Qaboos University. These students did not take
part in the meditation sessions but were given the same assessment
instruments both at the beginning and at the end of the 10-day period.
Being a naturalistic experiment, the groups were not initially matched for
specific factors that could arise by chance.
Vipassana meditation course requires the novice to
maintain strict silence for 9 days except to clear doubts with the teacher
or to solve material problems with volunteers. The meditators are
permitted to break their silence on the morning of the 10th
day, to facilitate their transition back to the outside world. The course
ends the 11th day morning.
Prior to start of the course, a brief explanation of the
study was given to the participants and they were assured that the data
and results would be treated confidentially. Their oral consent was then
taken. The control group students were also similarly assured and their
oral consent obtained.
Both the groups were assessed twice. The first assessment
(time1) was administered just before the start of the 10-day meditation
training session. The second assessment (time2) was done immediately after
the conclusion of the training. Even though the group of students did not
take part in the training, their assessment was done at the same time as
that of the training group. Both the groups were asked during the
assessment not to discuss the questionnaire between themselves so as to
avoid peer pressure.
Assessment measures
All the participants were assessed with non-invasive
measures, via self-report questionnaires. In this study, it was not viable
to collect biochemical markers or conduct clinical interviews to verify
self-report data. Since the participants could elect not to fill the
questionnaire, there was no obvious reason for them to give inaccurate
information. The subjective functioning data using Likert type self-report
are described in the result.
Conventional assessment measures were also used and
included GHQ-28, a 28-item scaled version of the original General Health
Questionnaire (GHQ), with four subscales derived by factor analysis.13
These include somatic symptoms, anxiety and insomnia, social dysfunction,
and severe depression.
The validity of the subscales is discussed in Goldberg &
Williams.14 The four subscales in GHQ-28 represent dimensions
of symptomatology; thus more symptoms result in a higher score but high
scores do not necessarily correspond to any psychiatric diagnosis. The
present analysis was derived from the composite score of GHQ-28. The other
conventional assessment measure used, the Hospital Anxiety and
Depression Scale (HADS),15 is a 14-item
questionnaire with two 7-item sub-scales, one for depression and the other
for anxiety. Symptoms are listed and subjects rate the frequency or
severity of these during the preceding week on a 4-point scale (0–3),
making a maximum possible score of 21 on each sub-scale. The original
validation study for the HADS suggested that on either sub-scale,
non-cases scored 7 or less, doubtful cases 8–10, and definite cases 11 or
more. Separate indices of anxiety and depression were recorded for the
present analysis.
Statistical analysis
The statistical software SPSS Version 10 for Windows was
used to analyse the data. The summary statistics were computed for some of
the demographic variables by group. Independent-sample t-test and paired
t-test were used to compare group means. Cross-tabulation was used on the
categorical variables and the chi-square ( c2) statistic and
corresponding p-values computed were applicable. For 2×2 tables,
Fisher-exact p-values were computed.
RESULTS
(i) Demographic information
Fourteen subjects (7 male and 7 female; mean age
40.14±12.67 years) participated in the Vipassana training session.
Thirty-one subjects (14 male and 17 female; mean age 19.77±0.84) formed
the control group. The two groups differed significantly in age (p<0.001).
Being a naturalistic experiment, it was logistically not possible to
balance ages between the groups. In terms of marital status, in Vipassana
group, 9 were married and 5 were single. Among the controls, only 2 were
married and the rest were single.
(ii) time 1: Subjective functioning on Health-Related
Quality of Life
The subjective functioning pertaining to health parameters
are summarized below. Most participants believed in their own abilities to
overcome difficult situations [Table 1], with no significant difference
between the two groups (p=0.558).

Over 90% (41/45) of the participants agreed that faith or
spiritual values helped them cope with pressures of life [Table 2]. There
was no significant differences between the two groups, p=0.366.
The control group perceived they had insufficient or poor
financial resources [Table 3], as is typical of students.
The perceived fitness levels of the two groups were
similar [Table 4]. Thirteen percent felt they were in excellent physical
condition while 40% felt the opposite.
(iii) Performance across time1 and time2
The subjective functioning of the participants is
summarized in Table 5. In the first assessment, the majority (29/45) felt
undecided whether they were happy or unhappy. However, the majority of the
Vipassana group (9/14) felt happy about life in the first assessment
itself. At the second assessment, four more participants from the
Vipassana group indicated that they felt happy about life.

All Vipassana meditators showed a pronounced improvement
in Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale and Modified General Health
Questionnaire. Scores for time1 and time2 are presented in Table 6.
Affective functioning
The summary statistics of the Hospital Anxiety and
Depression Scale are provided in Table 6. All the participants of
Vipassana showed a pronounced improvement in anxiety and depression. The
drop in the anxiety level in this group was particularly significant: an
average drop from 10 to 3.29 (p=0.001). On the other hand, the average
anxiety level of the control group increased marginally. The Vipassana
group also showed a marked drop on the Depression score (p=0.004). Before
meditation, they scored 6, but after the course the score dropped
significantly to 3.14.
General health
There were significant changes (p<0.001) between the time1
and time2 assessment using the Modified General Health Questionnaire
(GHQ-28). As can be seen from Table 7 and Figure 2, the control group’s
total score remained relatively stable. In contrast, the Vipassana group
showed steep reduction in the indices of psychiatric symptomatology,
suggesting the retreat was effective in ameliorating their psychiatric
symptomatology.
Discussion
In this age when many people seek alternative therapeutic
methods, there is a dearth of research of the efficacy on such
interventions in the population in the Middle East, and particularly in
Oman. This pilot study has attempted to address this lack by examining the
effects of Vipassana training on health-related quality of life and
physical and psychological symptomatology in a heterogeneous group of
subjects from among the resident population of Muscat. Studies from
elsewhere provide evidence that such an undertaking can enhance one’s
functional status and well-being as well as reduce physical symptoms and
psychological distress.4,16,17
In the present study, prior to Vipassana training, the
performance of those subjects who voluntarily elected to enrol in the
10-day course of Vipassana meditation had not differed from that of the
control group. Specifically, on subjective functioning (apart from the
issue pertaining to income and whether they were happy or not) the two
groups did not differ. These results support the observation by Gillani18
and Smith19 that prospective meditators do not differ from the
general population in their level of stress or distress. When tested
immediately after the 10-day training, their performance on several
parameters changed, suggesting alleviation of physical symptoms and
decreased psychological distress. In contrast, such fluctuations were not
seen in the control subjects who were tested at the same interval. This
finding is compatible with emerging evidence suggesting that meditative
techniques can have a great effect on physical and psychological
functioning.2,19,20
The present study is, however, not conclusive and had
several possible limitations. The scope of generalizing its findings could
be limited due to various factors. First, the sample size was small.
Second, the Vipassana subjects were a self-selective group of different
ages and it was not clear how many participants had previous experience
with meditation. Third, being naturalistic, the study relied entirely on
subjective reports. To overcome these limitations, it would be necessary
to replicate the study in different and larger populations and to use
stronger experimental methodology with random allocation between
conditions. Future studies could also employ objective physiological
measures to confirm the subjects’ perceived improvement. In the emerging
functional in-vivo neuro-imagining techniques, misreporting by subjects
can be independently verified.21,22 Fourth, it was not clear
how long the observed improvement would persist, since the post assessment
was conducted right at the end of the retreat. On the other hand, some
studies have reported that one-year follow-up revealed maintenance of
initial improvements on several outcome parameters.2 Data
collection by questionnaire is also not without problems.23
Although some structured questionnaires are easy to apply, studies have
found that different cultures attach different meanings to life and thus
conceive reality differently.24Although all the items of the
screening instrument have been validated in cross-cultural settings,14,25–26
its usefulness could still
be hampered by subtle linguistic and conceptual misunderstandings.
Therefore, specificity and sensitivity of these assessment tools need to
be examined.
A factor that could have enhanced the positive subjective
states of the Vipassana participants is the retreat environment itself
rather than the exercise per se: the subjects were residing in a
tension-free, cloistered environment for 10 days. They were completely
sheltered from outside happenings, since TV, newspapers, telephones and
visitors were forbidden. The simple food served could also have had a
positive effect. Breakfast was served at 6:30 am, lunch at 11:30 am, and
tea and fruit at 5 pm, after which no food was served. The meditators went
to sleep at 9:30 pm to awake the next day at 4:00 am. No physical exertion
apart from walking in a confined area was permitted. Ten days of such an
uncomplicated routine could have contributed positively to the mood and
behaviour of the novice. Again, since the meditators spent ten valuable
days on this process, they might have liked to think that their efforts
were successful.18 This might have caused them to rate
themselves higher in the second assessment. Similarly, the researcher’s
expectations could have influenced the results. However, the authors are
of the view that these limitations do not obscure the fact that Vipassana
meditation, with its simple technique and tightly controlled variables,
offers a fertile field for future studies, which should comprise precise
invasive and non-invasive methods.
The evidence from this study, however partial, combined
with those from other studies around the world, suggests that Vipassana
meditation may have the potential to enhance the health-related quality of
life and physical and psychological symptomatology, irrespective of ethnic
or cultural backgrounds. In Oman, the population has been growing since
the late 1970s at an annual rate of 4.86%,27 one of the fastest
in the world, which would increase competition for social and occupational
roles, and leave many failed individuals behind.28 Such a
demographic trend would place more and more individuals at risk for
developing various adjustment problems.29 The trend so far has
been to embrace ‘hi-tech’ therapeutic methods including psychotropic
medications which are expensive and often have side effects.30-32
With the rising cost of running health care systems33 and in an
age where many physical and psychological disorders arise because of what
people do to themselves rather than solely from external sources,34
a non-sectarian technique such as Vipassana may help in prevention and
therapy. The next challenge to the healthcare planners in developing
countries like Oman would be how to respond to the rising tide of the
‘diseases of affluence.’ 23,35 Serious contemplation of these
considerations should make clear the need to develop and allocate low-cost
therapeutic interventions such as meditation that have potential to
alleviate suffering and improve people’s functionality.
Conclusion
The results from this pilot study on participants of
Vipassana meditation in Muscat, Oman, when juxtaposed with the results of
studies in other parts of the world, suggests that this meditation
technique may help mitigate psychological and psychosomatic distress in
those who practise it. The study also implies that Vipassana meditation,
with its simple method and controllable variables, offers a fertile field
for future research, which should comprise invasive and non-invasive
methods.
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