Mindfulness-Based Exposure Strategies as a Transdiagnostic Mechanism of Change: An Exploratory Alternating Treatment Design.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to determine whether mindfulness strategies facilitate distress reduction in response to strong negative emotions compared to avoidance-based strategies in patients with anxiety disorders.
Results Summary
Mindfulness strategies were associated with higher initial distress levels compared to avoidance but showed declining distress within blocks, while avoidance led to static distress levels. No systematic changes in anxiety severity, distress aversion, or distraction/suppression were observed.
Population
Seven patients with heterogeneous anxiety disorders (panic disorder, social anxiety, generalized anxiety; mean age 31.14 years, 43% female, 86% Caucasian).
Effective Dosage
Three exposures per weeklong block (specific mindfulness technique details not provided).
Duration
6 weeks.
Interactions
None mentioned.
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
mindfulness strategies | increase | distress levels | patients with heterogeneous anxiety disorders | - | were associated with higher overall distress levels | #1 |
mindfulness strategies | decrease | distress levels | the majority of participants | - | exhibited declining distress levels | #2 |
avoidance-based strategies | no change | distress levels | participants | - | more static distress levels | #3 |
mindfulness strategies | no change | anxiety severity | patients with heterogeneous anxiety disorders | - | Systematic changes were not observed | #4 |
mindfulness strategies | no change | distress aversion | patients with heterogeneous anxiety disorders | - | Systematic changes were not observed | #5 |
mindfulness strategies | no change | distraction/suppression tendencies | patients with heterogeneous anxiety disorders | - | Systematic changes were not observed | #6 |
The present study explored whether distress reduction in response to strong negative emotions, a putative transdiagnostic mechanism of action, is facilitated by mindfulness strategies. Seven patients (mean age=31.14years, SD=12.28, range 19-48 years, 43% female, 86% Caucasian) with heterogeneous anxiety disorders (i.e., panic disorder with or without agoraphobia, social anxiety, generalized anxiety) were assigned a randomized order of weeklong blocks utilizing either mindfulness- or avoidance-based strategies while ascending a 6-week emotion exposure hierarchy. Participants completed three exposures per block and provided distress and avoidance use ratings following each exposure. Anxiety severity, distress aversion, and distraction/suppression tendencies were also assessed at baseline and the conclusion of each block. Visual, descriptive, and effect size results showing exposures utilizing mindfulness were associated with higher overall distress levels, compared with those utilizing avoidance. Within blocks, the majority of participants exhibited declining distress levels when employing mindfulness strategies, as opposed to more static distress levels in the avoidance condition. Systematic changes in anxiety severity, distress aversion, and distraction/suppression were not observed. These results suggest mindfulness strategies may be effective in facilitating emotion exposure; however, a minimum dosage may be necessary to overcome initial distress elevation. Potential transdiagnostic change mechanisms and clinical implications are discussed.