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Can a little bit of mindfulness do you good? A systematic review and meta-analyses of unguided mindfulness-based self-help interventions.

Clinical psychology review
November 1, 2021
Heather Taylor et al. (3 authors)
Journal ArticleMeta-AnalysisResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tReviewSystematic ReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of unguided mindfulness-based self-help (MBSH) interventions on outcomes like depression, mindfulness, anxiety, stress, and wellbeing/quality of life in public health settings.

Results Summary

MBSH showed small but statistically significant effects on depression, mindfulness, anxiety, stress, and wellbeing/quality of life post-intervention, with sustained effects for mindfulness, stress, and wellbeing/quality of life at follow-up. Non-digital MBSH interventions were more effective than digital ones for certain outcomes.

Population

Unselected samples and samples with mental and physical health-related difficulties.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (15)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
unguided mindfulness-based self-help (MBSH)
decrease
depression
randomized controlled trial participants
g = -0.23
demonstrated small, statistically significant effects
#1
unguided mindfulness-based self-help (MBSH)
increase
mindfulness
randomized controlled trial participants
g = 0.37
demonstrated small, statistically significant effects
#2
unguided mindfulness-based self-help (MBSH)
decrease
anxiety
randomized controlled trial participants
g = -0.25
demonstrated small, statistically significant effects
#3
unguided mindfulness-based self-help (MBSH)
decrease
stress
randomized controlled trial participants
g = -0.41
demonstrated small, statistically significant effects
#4
unguided mindfulness-based self-help (MBSH)
increase
wellbeing/ quality of life
randomized controlled trial participants
g = 0.34
demonstrated small, statistically significant effects
#5
unguided mindfulness-based self-help (MBSH)
increase
mindfulness
randomized controlled trial participants
-
significant effects were retained
#6
unguided mindfulness-based self-help (MBSH)
decrease
stress
randomized controlled trial participants
-
significant effects were retained
#7
unguided mindfulness-based self-help (MBSH)
increase
wellbeing/ quality of life
randomized controlled trial participants
-
significant effects were retained
#8
unguided mindfulness-based self-help (MBSH)
no change
depression
randomized controlled trial participants
-
significant effects were not retained
#9
unguided mindfulness-based self-help (MBSH)
no change
anxiety
randomized controlled trial participants
-
significant effects were not retained
#10
unguided mindfulness-based self-help (MBSH)
increase
all outcomes except wellbeing/ quality of life
randomized controlled trial participants
-
demonstrated significantly larger effects
#11
non-digital MBSH
decrease
depression
randomized controlled trial participants
-
demonstrated significantly greater effects
#12
non-digital MBSH
increase
mindfulness
randomized controlled trial participants
-
demonstrated significantly greater effects
#13
non-digital MBSH
increase
wellbeing/ quality of life
randomized controlled trial participants
-
demonstrated significantly greater effects
#14
unguided mindfulness-based self-help (MBSH)
no change
outcomes
samples selected for mental and physical health-related difficulties
-
no significant moderation effects were observed
#15
Abstract

Over the last decade there has been an explosion of interest in mindfulness-based self-help (MBSH) interventions. While widely available and extensively promoted, there is little consensus on their impact in public health or healthcare contexts. We present a systematic review and meta-analyses of 83 randomized controlled trials, comparing unguided MBSH to control conditions on outcomes of depression, mindfulness, anxiety, stress and/or wellbeing/ quality of life. A random effects model was used to compute post-intervention, between-groups effect sizes for each outcome. MBSH demonstrated small, statistically significant effects at post-interventions for outcomes of depression (g = -0.23), mindfulness (g = 0.37) anxiety (g = -0.25), stress (g = -0.41) and wellbeing/ quality of life (g = 0.34). Significant effects were retained at follow-up for mindfulness, stress and wellbeing/ quality of life but not for depression or anxiety. Planned moderator analyses demonstrated significantly larger effects of MBSH when compared to inactive, versus active-control conditions on all outcomes except wellbeing/ quality of life, and non-digital MBSH interventions demonstrated significantly greater effects on depression, mindfulness and wellbeing/ quality of life outcomes than digitally-delivered MBSH. When studies that utilised samples selected for mental and physical health-related difficulties were respectively compared to studies that utilised unselected samples, no significant moderation effects were observed. In sum, these findings provide evidence for the effectiveness of unguided MBSH in public health settings and the practical, access-related implications of this are discussed.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AnxietyAnxiety DisordersDepressionHumansMindfulnessQuality of Life
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy72/10
Quality85/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations38
Citations/Year9.5
Relative Citation Ratio5.08
NIH Percentile93.2%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score2.83
Normalized Score0.66
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