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Decreased symptoms of depression after mindfulness-based stress reduction: potential moderating effects of religiosity, spirituality, trait mindfulness, sex, and age

Decreased symptoms of depression after mindfulness-based stress reduction: potential moderating effects of religiosity, spirituality, trait mindfulness, sex, and age
Decreased symptoms of depression after mindfulness-based stress reduction: potential moderating effects of religiosity, spirituality, trait mindfulness, sex, and age
Objective: mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) is a secular meditation training program that reduces depressive symptoms. Little is known, however, about the degree to which a participant's spiritual and religious background, or other demographic characteristics associated with risk for depression, may affect the effectiveness of MBSR. Therefore, this study tested whether individual differences in religiosity, spirituality, motivation for spiritual growth, trait mindfulness, sex, and age affect MBSR effectiveness.

Methods: as part of an open trial, multiple regression was used to analyze variation in depressive symptom outcomes among 322 adults who enrolled in an 8-week, community-based MBSR program.

Results: as hypothesized, depressive symptom severity decreased significantly in the full study sample (d=0.57; p<0.01). After adjustment for baseline symptom severity, moderation analyses revealed no significant differences in the change in depressive symptoms following MBSR as a function of spirituality, religiosity, trait mindfulness, or demographic variables. Paired t tests found consistent, statistically significant (p<0.01) reductions in depressive symptoms across all subgroups by religious affiliation, intention for spiritual growth, sex, and baseline symptom severity. After adjustment for baseline symptom scores, age, sex, and religious affiliation, a significant proportion of variance in post-MBSR depressive symptoms was uniquely explained by changes in both spirituality (?=?0.15; p=0.006) and mindfulness (?=?0.17; p<0.001).

Conclusions: these findings suggest that MBSR, a secular meditation training program, is associated with improved depressive symptoms regardless of affiliation with a religion, sense of spirituality, trait level of mindfulness before MBSR training, sex, or age. Increases in both mindfulness and daily spiritual experiences uniquely explained improvement in depressive symptoms
1075-5535
166-174
Greeson, Jeffrey M.
d1210422-0b28-40d1-bbec-7e0cdef2837f
Smoski, Moria J.
48abb01e-18fe-49c0-a40a-702d6733a160
Suarez, Edward C.
6f0abcc1-f9de-4268-bda8-bc173ee79a10
Brantley, Jeffrey G.
f341480f-5337-4153-b40d-c50733713dc1
Ekblad, Andrew G.
cbfcd85d-d73d-4e5a-9c05-c0372991380c
Lynch, Thomas R.
29e90123-0aef-46c8-b320-1617fb48bb20
Wolever, Ruth Quillian
b8cbf79f-768b-499c-a8f0-e624736fbf84
Greeson, Jeffrey M.
d1210422-0b28-40d1-bbec-7e0cdef2837f
Smoski, Moria J.
48abb01e-18fe-49c0-a40a-702d6733a160
Suarez, Edward C.
6f0abcc1-f9de-4268-bda8-bc173ee79a10
Brantley, Jeffrey G.
f341480f-5337-4153-b40d-c50733713dc1
Ekblad, Andrew G.
cbfcd85d-d73d-4e5a-9c05-c0372991380c
Lynch, Thomas R.
29e90123-0aef-46c8-b320-1617fb48bb20
Wolever, Ruth Quillian
b8cbf79f-768b-499c-a8f0-e624736fbf84

Greeson, Jeffrey M., Smoski, Moria J., Suarez, Edward C., Brantley, Jeffrey G., Ekblad, Andrew G., Lynch, Thomas R. and Wolever, Ruth Quillian (2015) Decreased symptoms of depression after mindfulness-based stress reduction: potential moderating effects of religiosity, spirituality, trait mindfulness, sex, and age. Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, 21 (3), 166-174. (doi:10.1089/acm.2014.0285).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) is a secular meditation training program that reduces depressive symptoms. Little is known, however, about the degree to which a participant's spiritual and religious background, or other demographic characteristics associated with risk for depression, may affect the effectiveness of MBSR. Therefore, this study tested whether individual differences in religiosity, spirituality, motivation for spiritual growth, trait mindfulness, sex, and age affect MBSR effectiveness.

Methods: as part of an open trial, multiple regression was used to analyze variation in depressive symptom outcomes among 322 adults who enrolled in an 8-week, community-based MBSR program.

Results: as hypothesized, depressive symptom severity decreased significantly in the full study sample (d=0.57; p<0.01). After adjustment for baseline symptom severity, moderation analyses revealed no significant differences in the change in depressive symptoms following MBSR as a function of spirituality, religiosity, trait mindfulness, or demographic variables. Paired t tests found consistent, statistically significant (p<0.01) reductions in depressive symptoms across all subgroups by religious affiliation, intention for spiritual growth, sex, and baseline symptom severity. After adjustment for baseline symptom scores, age, sex, and religious affiliation, a significant proportion of variance in post-MBSR depressive symptoms was uniquely explained by changes in both spirituality (?=?0.15; p=0.006) and mindfulness (?=?0.17; p<0.001).

Conclusions: these findings suggest that MBSR, a secular meditation training program, is associated with improved depressive symptoms regardless of affiliation with a religion, sense of spirituality, trait level of mindfulness before MBSR training, sex, or age. Increases in both mindfulness and daily spiritual experiences uniquely explained improvement in depressive symptoms

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acm.2014.0285 - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 28 January 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 19 February 2015
Published date: 11 March 2015
Organisations: Psychology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 375962
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/375962
ISSN: 1075-5535
PURE UUID: 9cabc886-d917-4b9f-b236-499ee462788b
ORCID for Thomas R. Lynch: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1270-6097

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Date deposited: 10 Apr 2015 12:45
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:32

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Contributors

Author: Jeffrey M. Greeson
Author: Moria J. Smoski
Author: Edward C. Suarez
Author: Jeffrey G. Brantley
Author: Andrew G. Ekblad
Author: Thomas R. Lynch ORCID iD
Author: Ruth Quillian Wolever

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