Does personality moderate the effects on mindfulness training for medical and psychology students?
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/6092Date
2013Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
de Vibe, Michael; Solhaug, Ida; Tyssen, Reidar; Friborg, Oddgeir; Rosenvinge, Jan H; Sørlie, Tore; Halland, Even; Bjørndal, ArildAbstract
The majority of mindfulness research to date has
reported only on the group-level effects of interventions.
Therefore, there is a need to better understand who is most
likely to benefit from mindfulness interventions. This study
reports on moderation analyses from a two-centre randomised
controlled trial of mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR)
among 288 medical and psychology students. The study
investigated whether baseline personality factors (neuroticism,
conscientiousness and extroversion) and baseline mindfulness
moderated effects on mental distress, study stress and
subjective well-being measured after the intervention. An
increased effect of the intervention on mental distress and
subjective well-being was found in students with higher
scores on neuroticism. Students with higher scores on
conscientiousness showed an increased effect of mindfulness
training on study stress. The training protected students
against an increase in mental distress and study stress and a
decrease in subjective well-being that was seen in the control
group. Baseline mindfulness and extroversion did not
moderate the effects of the intervention on the outcomes.
The majority of the 288 medical and psychology students in
the study sample were female. Female participants scored
significantly higher on neuroticism and conscientiousness,
and they may therefore be an important target group for
mindfulness interventions among students.
Publisher
SpringerLinkCitation
Mindfulness (2013)Metadata
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