Michele Gassman
University of Wisconsin-Madison
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Annals of Family Medicine | 2012
Bruce Barrett; Mary S. Hayney; Daniel Muller; David Rakel; Ann Ward; Chidi N. Obasi; Roger Brown; Zhengjun Zhang; Aleksandra Zgierska; James E. Gern; Rebecca West; Tola Ewers; Shari Barlow; Michele Gassman; Christopher L. Coe
PURPOSE This study was designed to evaluate potential preventive effects of meditation or exercise on incidence, duration, and severity of acute respiratory infection (ARI) illness. METHODS Community-recruited adults aged 50 years and older were randomized to 1 of 3 study groups: 8-week training in mindfulness meditation, matched 8-week training in moderate-intensity sustained exercise, or observational control. The primary outcome was area-under-the-curve global illness severity during a single cold and influenza season, using the Wisconsin Upper Respiratory Symptom Survey (WURSS-24) to assess severity. Health care visits and days of missed work were counted. Nasal wash collected during ARI illness was assayed for neutrophils, interleukin-8, and viral nucleic acid. RESULTS Of 154 adults randomized into the study, 149 completed the trial (82% female, 94% white, mean age 59.3 ± 6.6 years). There were 27 ARI episodes and 257 days of ARI illness in the meditation group (n = 51), 26 episodes and 241 illness days in the exercise group (n = 47), and 40 episodes and 453 days in the control group (n = 51). Mean global severity was 144 for meditation, 248 for exercise, and 358 for control. Compared with control, global severity was significantly lower for meditation (P = .004). Both global severity and total days of illness (duration) trended toward being lower for the exercise group (P=.16 and P=.032, respectively), as did illness duration for the meditation group (P=.034). Adjusting for covariates using zero-inflated multivariate regression models gave similar results. There were 67 ARI-related days of-work missed in the control group, 32 in the exercise group (P = .041), and 16 in the meditation group (P <.001). Health care visits did not differ significantly. Viruses were identified in 54% of samples from meditation, 42% from exercise, and 54% from control groups. Neutrophil count and interleukin-8 levels were similar among intervention groups. CONCLUSIONS Training in meditation or exercise may be effective in reducing ARI illness burden.
Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses | 2013
Chidi N. Obasi; Roger Brown; Tola Ewers; Shari Barlow; Michele Gassman; Aleksandra Zgierska; Christopher L. Coe; Bruce Barrett
Please cite this paper as: Obasi et al. (2012) Advantage of meditation over exercise in reducing cold and flu illness is related to improved function and quality of life. Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses 00(0), 00–00.
Family Practice | 2013
David Rakel; Marlon Mundt; Tola Ewers; Luke Fortney; Aleksandra Zgierska; Michele Gassman; Bruce Barrett
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Acute respiratory infection (ARI) is among the most common, debilitating and expensive human illnesses. The purpose of this study was to assess ARI-related costs and determine if mindfulness meditation or exercise can add value. METHODS One hundred and fifty-four adults ≥50 years from Madison, WI for the 2009-10 cold/flu season were randomized to (i) wait-list control (ii) meditation or (iii) moderate intensity exercise. ARI-related costs were assessed through self-reported medication use, number of missed work days and medical visits. Costs per subject were based on cost of generic medications, missed work days (
Journal of Offender Rehabilitation | 2009
Randall Brown; Megan Zuelsdorff; Michele Gassman
126.20) and clinic visits (
Evidence-based Complementary and Alternative Medicine | 2013
Aleksandra Zgierska; Chidi N. Obasi; Roger Brown; Tola Ewers; Daniel Muller; Michele Gassman; Shari Barlow; Bruce Barrett
78.70). Monte Carlo bootstrap methods evaluated reduced costs of ARI episodes. RESULTS The total cost per subject for the control group was
American Journal on Addictions | 2013
Randy Brown; Michele Gassman; Scott Hetzel; Lisa Berger
214 (95% CI:
Journal of Psychopharmacology | 2018
Christopher R. Nicholas; Kelsey M. Henriquez; Michele Gassman; Karen M. Cooper; Daniel Muller; Scott Hetzel; Randall Brown; Nicholas V. Cozzi; Chantelle Thomas; Paul R. Hutson
105-
American Journal on Addictions | 2013
Randy Brown; Michele Gassman
358), exercise
BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine | 2012
Bruce Barrett; David Rakel; Mary S. Hayney; Daniel Muller; Aleksandra Zgierska; Chidi N. Obasi; Tola Ewers; R West; Roger Brown; Zhengjun Zhang; Michele Gassman; Shari Barlow; Christopher L. Coe
136 (95% CI:
Clinical Pharmacokinectics | 2017
Randall Brown; Christopher R. Nicholas; Nicholas V. Cozzi; Michele Gassman; Karen M. Cooper; Daniel Muller; Chantelle Thomas; Scott Hetzel; Kelsey M. Henriquez; Alexandra S. Ribaudo; Paul R. Hutson
64-