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The influence of hatha yoga on stress, anxiety, and suppression: A randomized controlled trial.

Acta psychologica
November 1, 2023
Bence Szaszkó et al. (8 authors)
Randomized Controlled TrialJournal ArticleHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to determine whether an eight-week Hatha Yoga program could enhance distraction suppression, reduce stress, and increase mindfulness in healthy yoga novices.

Results Summary

The study found significant reductions in self-reported stress and stress reactivity, as well as increased mindfulness, but no significant changes in anxiety or distractor suppression abilities.

Population

98 healthy yoga novices aged 18-40 years.

Effective Dosage

Not specified (eight-week Hatha Yoga program).

Duration

Eight weeks.

Interactions

None mentioned.

Extracted Claims (11)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
eight-week yoga program
increase
distraction suppression
individuals
-
foster distraction suppression
#1
eight-week yoga program
decrease
stress and discomfort
individuals
-
reducing stress and discomfort
#2
Hatha Yoga
increase
ability to suppress distractions
participants
-
improved participants' ability to suppress distractions
#3
Hatha Yoga
decrease
self-reported stress and stress reactivity
participants
-
selectively decrease self-reported stress and stress reactivity
#4
Hatha Yoga
increase
mindfulness
participants
-
increase participants' mindfulness
#5
eight weeks of yoga practice
decrease
self-reported stress and stress reactivity levels
those participating in the intervention
significant reductions
significant reductions in self-reported stress and stress reactivity levels
#6
eight weeks of yoga practice
increase
mindfulness
those participating in the intervention
-
increased mindfulness
#7
the intervention
no change
state or trait anxiety
-
no significant changes
no significant changes in state or trait anxiety
#8
the intervention
no change
participants' ability to suppress distractors
participants
-
not affected
#9
regular participation in Hatha Yoga
increase
mental health outcomes
-
-
can improve mental health outcomes
#10
regular participation in Hatha Yoga
no change
cognitive functioning directly related to distractor suppression
-
-
without impacting cognitive functioning directly related to distractor suppression
#11
Abstract

Engaging in yoga may mitigate stress and anxiety in individuals while potentially enhancing one's capacity to manage distractions. Our research aimed to explore the relation between these two outcomes: Can an eight-week yoga program foster distraction suppression, thereby reducing stress and discomfort? To answer this question, we used Hatha Yoga, the most commonly practiced form of yoga. We tested if the intervention improved participants' ability to suppress distractions and selectively decrease self-reported stress and stress reactivity. In Addition, we investigated whether such an intervention would increase participants' mindfulness. Our study included 98 healthy yoga novices between 18 and 40 years who were randomly assigned to either an experimental or a waitlist condition, with each participant completing pre- and post-intervention assessments, including questionnaires, as well as electrophysiological and behavioral measures. After eight weeks of yoga practice, significant reductions in self-reported stress and stress reactivity levels, as well as increased mindfulness, were observed among those participating in the intervention relative to those in the waitlist control group. There were, however, no significant changes in state or trait anxiety due to the intervention. Changes in stress measures could not be explained by changes in participants' ability to suppress distractors, which was not affected by the intervention. Overall, our findings suggest that regular participation in Hatha Yoga can improve mental health outcomes without impacting cognitive functioning directly related to distractor suppression. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT05232422.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
HumansAnxietyAnxiety DisordersHealth StatusMeditationYogaAdolescentYoung AdultAdult
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy75/10
Quality85/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations6
Citations/Year3.0
Relative Citation Ratio2.56
NIH Percentile81.4%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.50
Weight Score2.82
Normalized Score0.67
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