Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"mindfulness" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Web-Based Formal Versus Informal Mindfulness Programs for University Students With and Those Without Recent Self-Injury: Randomized Controlled Trial Petrovic J; Mettler J; Böke BN; Rogers MA; Hamza CA; Bloom E; Di Genova L; Romano V; Heath NL; 41313154
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Dispositional mindfulness profiles and psychological symptoms: a latent profile analysis Mehrabi F; Beshai S; 39944045
PSYCHOLOGY
3 The effectiveness and acceptability of formal versus informal mindfulness among university students with and without recent self-injury: A randomized controlled trial Petrovic J; Mettler J; Böke BN; Rogers MA; Hamza CA; Bloom E; Di Genova L; Romano V; Heath NL; 39489621
PSYCHOLOGY
4 Proof-of-concept testing of a mobile application-delivered mindfulness exercise for emotional eaters: RAIN delivered as a step-by-step image sequence Carrière K; Siemers N; Thapar S; Knäuper B; 39114459
HKAP
5 How we teach mindfulness matters: Adolescent development and the importance of informal mindfulness Mettler J; Zito S; Bastien L; Bloom E; Heath NL; 38876551
PSYCHOLOGY
6 Understanding Adolescents' Experiences With Menstrual Pain to Inform the User-Centered Design of a Mindfulness-Based App: Mixed Methods Investigation Study Gagnon MM; Brilz AR; Alberts NM; Gordon JL; Risling TL; Stinson JN; 38587886
PSYCHOLOGY
7 Effectiveness of a mindfulness-based psychoeducation group programme for early-stage schizophrenia: An 18-month randomised controlled trial. Chien WT, Cheng HY, McMaster TW, Yip ALK, Wong JCL 31416744
PSYCHOLOGY

 

Title:Proof-of-concept testing of a mobile application-delivered mindfulness exercise for emotional eaters: RAIN delivered as a step-by-step image sequence
Authors:Carrière KSiemers NThapar SKnäuper B
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39114459/
DOI:10.21037/mhealth-23-56
Publication:mHealth
Keywords:Mindfulnesseating behaviourmetaphormobile applications
PMID:39114459 Category: Date Added:2024-08-08
Dept Affiliation: HKAP
1 Department of Psychology, Faculty of Science, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
2 Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Faculty of Medicine, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
3 Department of Health, Kinesiology, and Applied Physiology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.

Description:

Background: Over fifty percent of individuals with overweight and obesity are emotional eaters. Emotional eating can be theorized as a conditioned response to eat for reasons that are not associated with physiological hunger. We conducted this proof-of-concept study to gather evidence that a mobile app that delivers a common non-meditative mindfulness exercise called RAIN, in a step-by-step image sequence can improve emotional eating and other outcomes over a 3-week period.

Methods: Forty-nine Canadian adults who self reported as emotional eaters (mean age =30.7 years) were recruited through social media and participated in a workshop in which RAIN and its use on the app were introduced. Participants were asked to use the app every time that they experienced a non-homeostatic craving to eat for three weeks. Emotional eating, reactivity to food cravings, perceived loss of control around food, distress tolerance, and eating-specific mindfulness were assessed pre- and post-intervention.

Results: Improvements on all outcomes were found (r-range, -0.58 to -0.28). The feasibility of the mobile application was demonstrated by a low attrition rate (8%), high user satisfaction, and strong app engagement metrics.

Conclusions: The data provide proof-of-concept evidence that a mobile app that delivers a mindfulness exercise in a step-by-step image sequence has potential to be effective and thus identifies a new approach that may reduce emotional eating in an accessible and affordable manner.





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