Self-administered mindfulness interventions reduce stress in a large, randomized controlled multi-site study
Author
Sparacio, Alessandro
IJzerman, Hans
Giorgini, Filippo
Spiessens, Christoph
Uchino, Bert N.
Landvatter, Joshua
Tacana, Tracey
Diller, Sandra J.
Derrick, Jaye L.
Segundo, Joahana
Pierce, Jace D.
Ross, Robert M.
Francis, Zoë
LaBoucane, Amanda
Ma-Kellams, Christine
Ford, Maire B.
Schmidt, Kathleen
Wong, Celia C.
Higgins, Wendy C.
Stone, Bryant M.
Stanley, Samantha K.
Ribeiro, Gianni
Fuglestad, Paul T.
Jaklin, Valerie
Kübler, Andrea
Ziebell, Philipp
Jewell, Crystal L.
Kovas, Yulia
Allahghadri, Mahnoosh
Fransham, Charlotte
Baranski, Michael F.
Burgess, Hannah
Benz, Annika B.E.
DeSousa, Maysa
Nylin, Catherine E.
Brooks, Janae C.
Goldsmith, Caitlyn M.
Benson, Jessica M.
Griffin, Siobhán M.
Dunne, Stephen
Davis, William E.
Watermeyer, Tam J.
Meese, William B.
Howell, Jennifer L.
Standiford Reyes, Laurel
Strickland, Megan G.
Dickerson, Sally S.
Pescatore, Samantha
Skakoon-Sparling, Shayna
Wunder, Zachary I.
Day, Martin V.
Brenton, Shawna
Linden, Audrey H.
Hawk, Christopher E.
O’Brien, Léan V.
Urgyen, Tenzin
McDonald, Jennifer S.
van der Schans, Kim Lien
Blocker, Heidi
Ng Tseung-Wong, Caroline
Jiga-Boy, Gabriela M.
Publication date
2024Published in
Nature Human BehaviourVolume / Issue
8 (11.6.2024)ISBN / ISSN
ISSN: 2397-3374ISBN / ISSN
eISSN: 2397-3374Metadata
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This publication has a published version with DOI 10.1038/s41562-024-01907-7
Abstract
Mindfulness witnessed a substantial popularity surge in the past decade, especially as digitally self-administered interventions became available at relatively low costs. Yet, it is uncertain whether they effectively help reduce stress. In a preregistered (OSF https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/UF4JZ; retrospective registration at ClinicalTrials.gov NCT06308744) multi-site study (nsites = 37, nparticipants = 2,239, 70.4% women, Mage = 22.4, s.d.age = 10.1, all fluent English speakers), we experimentally tested whether four single, standalone mindfulness exercises effectively reduced stress, using Bayesian mixed-effects models. All exercises proved to be more efficacious than the active control. We observed a mean difference of 0.27 (d = -0.56; 95% confidence interval, -0.43 to -0.69) between the control condition (M = 1.95, s.d. = 0.50) and the condition with the largest stress reduction (body scan: M = 1.68, s.d. = 0.46). Our findings suggest that mindfulness may be beneficial for reducing self-reported short-term stress for English speakers from higher-income countries.
Keywords
Self-administered mindfulness intervention, stress, RCT
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14178/2643License
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