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Enhancing Web-based mindfulness training for mental health promotion with the health action process approach: randomized controlled trial.

Journal of medical Internet research
January 1, 1970
Winnie W S Mak et al. (5 authors)
Journal ArticleRandomized Controlled TrialResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to evaluate the efficacy of two Internet-based mindfulness interventions (basic and HAPA-enhanced) compared to a waitlist control in improving mindfulness and mental well-being.

Results Summary

The HAPA-enhanced group showed significantly higher mindfulness levels post-intervention, sustained at follow-up. Both mindfulness groups demonstrated improved mental well-being post-intervention, with effects lasting at 3-month follow-up.

Population

University students and staff (321 participants).

Effective Dosage

8-week fully automated online mindfulness training.

Duration

8 weeks.

Interactions

None mentioned.

Extracted Claims (4)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
basic mindfulness
increase
mental well-being
university students and staff
-
showed better
#1
HAPA-enhanced mindfulness
increase
mindfulness
university students and staff
-
showed significantly higher levels
#2
HAPA-enhanced mindfulness
increase
mental well-being
university students and staff
-
showed better
#3
online mindfulness training
increase
mental health
-
-
can improve
#4
Abstract

BACKGROUND: With increasing evidence demonstrating the effectiveness of Web-based interventions and mindfulness-based training in improving health, delivering mindfulness training online is an attractive proposition. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of two Internet-based interventions (basic mindfulness and Health Action Process Approach enhanced mindfulness) with waitlist control. Health Action Process Approach (HAPA) principles were used to enhance participants' efficacy and planning. METHODS: Participants were recruited online and offline among local universities; 321 university students and staff were randomly assigned to three conditions. The basic and HAPA-enhanced groups completed the 8-week fully automated mindfulness training online. All participants (including control) were asked to complete an online questionnaire pre-program, post-program, and at 3-month follow-up. RESULTS: Significant group by time interaction effect was found. The HAPA-enhanced group showed significantly higher levels of mindfulness from pre-intervention to post-intervention, and such improvement was sustained at follow-up. Both the basic and HAPA-enhanced mindfulness groups showed better mental well-being from pre-intervention to post-intervention, and improvement was sustained at 3-month follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: Online mindfulness training can improve mental health. An online platform is a viable medium to implement and disseminate evidence-based interventions and is a highly scalable approach to reach the general public. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Chinese Clinical Trial Registry (ChiCTR): ChiCTR-TRC-12002954; http://www.chictr.org/en/proj/show.aspx?proj=3904 (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/6VCdG09pA).

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Follow-Up StudiesHealth PromotionHumansIntention to Treat AnalysisInternetMental HealthMindfulnessQuality of LifeSurveys and QuestionnairesUniversities
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy85/10
Quality80/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations53
Citations/Year5.3
Relative Citation Ratio3.12
NIH Percentile85.8%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score1.87
Normalized Score0.70
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