Effects of a brief mindfulness intervention on negative affect and urge to drink among college student drinkers.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to determine whether a brief mindfulness meditation intervention could reduce negative affect, lower urges to drink, and delay the next alcoholic drink in at-risk college student drinkers.
Results Summary
The mindfulness intervention increased state mindfulness and relaxation while reducing negative affect immediately after the intervention, but it did not influence responses to negative affect induction or other outcome variables afterward. The initial gains were not maintained, possibly due to the intervention's brevity.
Population
At-risk college student drinkers (N = 207)
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Brief intervention (exact duration not specified)
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
mindfulness meditation | increase | regulation of NA | - | - | can improve | #1 |
brief mindfulness meditation | decrease | levels of NA | at-risk college student drinkers | - | would lower | #2 |
brief mindfulness meditation | increase | willingness to experience NA | at-risk college student drinkers | - | increase | #3 |
brief mindfulness meditation | decrease | urges to drink | at-risk college student drinkers | - | lower | #4 |
brief mindfulness meditation | increase | time to next alcoholic drink | at-risk college student drinkers | - | increase | #5 |
mindfulness intervention | increase | state mindfulness | at-risk college student drinkers | - | increased | #6 |
mindfulness intervention | increase | relaxation | at-risk college student drinkers | - | increased | #7 |
mindfulness intervention | decrease | NA | at-risk college student drinkers | - | decreased | #8 |
mindfulness intervention | no change | responses to NA induction on any of the outcome variables | at-risk college student drinkers | - | did not influence | #9 |
Several theories have proposed that negative affect (NA) plays a large role in the maintenance of substance use behaviors - a phenomenon supported in laboratory-based and clinical studies. It has been demonstrated that mindfulness meditation can improve the regulation of NA, suggesting that mindfulness may be very beneficial in treating problematic substance use behavior. The current study tested whether a brief mindfulness meditation would lower levels of NA, increase willingness to experience NA, lower urges to drink, and increase time to next alcoholic drink in a sample of at-risk college student drinkers (N = 207). Participants were randomized to one of three brief interventions (mindfulness, relaxation, or control) followed by an affect manipulation (negative or neutral stimuli). Affect and urge were measured prior to intervention (Time 1 [T1]), after intervention but prior to affect manipulation (Time 2 [T2]), and immediately after the affect manipulation (Time 3 [T3]). Levels of mindfulness and relaxation were assessed from T1-T3. The additional measures of willingness to continue watching NA images and time to next alcoholic drink were examined at T3. Results indicated that the mindfulness intervention increased state mindfulness and relaxation, and decreased NA immediately following the mindfulness intervention. However, the mindfulness intervention did not influence responses to NA induction on any of the outcome variables at T3. One potential explanation is that the mindfulness intervention was not robust enough to maintain the initial gains made immediately following the intervention.