Reasons for Individuals not Enrolling for Yoga trial in Addiction
S. Sarkar, A. Dhawan, R. Quraishi, P. S. Negi, A. Kumar

TL;DR
This study explores why many patients with opioid dependence did not enroll in a yoga trial, finding that time constraints and lack of access were major barriers.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into barriers to yoga adoption among opioid-dependent patients, highlighting practical challenges in implementing complementary therapies.
Findings
The most common reason for non-enrollment was lack of time for training and practicing yoga.
Over one-third of non-enrolled patients had prior experience with yoga.
A small percentage expressed interest in online yoga as an alternative.
Abstract
Yoga has been demonstrated to have a range of beneficial effects on individuals with substance use disorders, including opioid use disorders. We initiated a randomized clinical trial to find out the efficacy of add-on yoga among patients with opioid dependence stabilized on treatment to find out whether it led to improvement in sleep and quality of life. However, the rate of enrolment into the study was quite low. In this interim analysis, we present the preliminary data on the reasons for non-enrolment in the yoga trial. The single-centre trial involved 1:1 randomization of patients with opioid dependence stabilized on medications (naltrexone or buprenorphine) for a period of at least 4 weeks into two groups (add-on yoga or wait-list control). The yoga included asanas and panchakosha meditation, taught for a period of 7 days and to be practiced by the participants for a period of 12…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMindfulness and Compassion Interventions
