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Yoga Versus Yoga Plus Mindfulness on Perceived Stress and Mindful Attention Awareness in a Chiropractic College Setting

J

Jeanmarie R. Burke, PhD

Status

Completed

Conditions

Occupational Stress

Treatments

Behavioral: Physical-Based Yoga Practice
Behavioral: Mindfulness-Based Yoga Practice

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Objective: The purpose of the study was to compare the effects of different types of yoga practices on mindfulness and stress levels reported by students, faculty, and staff at a health professional school. Including mindfulness cues (body scan, mindful movement, and yoga nidra) with Bishnu Gosh lineage hatha yoga as taught by Mary Jarvis may have additive therapeutic effects on mindfulness and stress.

Methods: This was a quasi-experimental pre-post test design. Sixty-three individuals qualified for the study and were randomized in a 1:1 allocation ratio of matched pairs into either a physical-based yoga practice (Yoga Group, n = 31) or a mindfulness-based yoga practice (Yoga + Mindfulness Group, n = 32). Participants attended two 50-minute class sessions per week during the four-week intervention phase. The primary outcomes were the 10-item Perceived Stress Scale (PSS-10) and the 15-item Mindful Attention Awareness Scale (MAAS).

Full description

Objective: The purpose of the study was to compare the effects of different types of yoga practices on mindfulness and stress levels reported by students, faculty, and staff at a health professional school. Including mindfulness cues (body scan, mindful movement, and yoga nidra) with Bishnu Gosh lineage hatha yoga as taught by Mary Jarvis may have additive therapeutic effects on mindfulness and stress.

Methods: This was a quasi-experimental pre-post test design. Sixty-three individuals qualified for the study and were randomized in a 1:1 allocation ratio of matched pairs into either a physical-based yoga practice (Yoga Group, n = 31) or a mindfulness-based yoga practice (Yoga + Mindfulness Group, n = 32). Participants attended two 50-minute class sessions per week during the four-week intervention phase. A sample size of 30 participants per class was deemed appropriate based upon the assumption of normality and the central limit theorem underlying the mathematics of inferential statistics.

The yoga class sessions included the physical postures of yoga with an emphasis on alignment, holding postures, and breathing normally. Throughout the yoga class session, the instructor demonstrated the performances of the physical postures. While participants were performing the physical postures, the instructor provided verbal alignment cues to the participants. As needed, the instructor also demonstrated postural modifications, which allowed all participants to perform all physical postures. Each class session sequentially included the following physical postures of yoga: (1) standing in stillness; (2) pranayama deep breathing and warm up; (3) standing series- balance postures, wide leg postures; (4) transition from the standing postures to the floor postures with tree pose; (5) floor series - wind removing, sit up movements, cobra posture, kneeling postures; (6) cool down-stretching, spine twist, Kapalbhati breathing, and Savasana.

The Yoga + Mindfulness class sessions included all elements of the yoga class session described above with the addition of mindfulness cues. The mindfulness cues included body scan, mindful movement, and yoga nidra. Beyond verbal physical cues on how to control breathing and perform precise body movements during the yoga postures, verbal mindfulness cues asked participants to focus on the sensations of their breathing and body awareness non judgmentally, e.g. Feel your breathe move in through your nose and fill your lungs from bottom to top. Feel your breath exit the nose and empty lungs from top to bottom. Keep your attention on your breath and your body. In general, the instructor reminded the participants throughout the Yoga + Mindfulness class session to "feel the sensation of ..."or "keep your attention on ..."as the instructor provided the alignment cues.

The primary outcomes were pre-post changes in the 10-item Perceived Stress Scale (PSS-10) and the 15-item Mindful Attention Awareness Scale (MAAS).

Enrollment

63 patients

Sex

All

Ages

20 to 65 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Male or Female
  • Age Limits: from 20 years to 65 years of age

Exclusion criteria

  • Pregnancy
  • Nursing
  • Wearing a pacemaker
  • Prescription medications except for birth control or ADD/ADHD medications
  • Stroke within the past three months
  • Heart attack within the past three months
  • Surgery within the past three months
  • Car accident with injuries in the past three months
  • Litigation of any type within the past three months or currently
  • Currently participating in yoga activities once per week
  • Currently participating in mindfulness activities once per week

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

63 participants in 2 patient groups

Physical-Based Yoga Practice
Experimental group
Description:
Participants attended two 50-minute class sessions per week during the four week intervention phase. The physical-based yoga practice was Bishnu Ghosh lineage hatha yoga as taught by Mary Jarvis. The yoga class sessions included the physical postures of yoga with an emphasis on alignment, holding postures, and breathing normally. Each yoga class session sequentially included the following physical postures of yoga: (1) standing in stillness; (2) pranayama deep breathing and warm up; (3) standing series- balance postures, wide leg postures; (4) transition from the standing postures to the floor postures with tree pose; (5) floor series - wind removing, sit up movements, cobra posture, kneeling postures; (6) cool down-stretching, spine twist, Kapalbhati breathing, and Savasana.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Physical-Based Yoga Practice
Mindfulness-Based Yoga Practice
Experimental group
Description:
Participants attended two 50-minute class sessions per week during the four week intervention phase. The mindfulness-based yoga practice included all elements of the physical-based yoga class sessions with the addition of mindfulness cues. The mindfulness cues included body scan, mindful movement, and yoga nidra. Beyond verbal physical cues on how to control breathing and perform precise body movements during the yoga postures, verbal mindfulness cues asked participants to focus on the sensations of their breathing and body awareness non judgmentally, e.g. Feel your breathe move in through your nose and fill your lungs from bottom to top. Feel your breath exit the nose and empty lungs from top to bottom. Keep your attention on your breath and your body.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Mindfulness-Based Yoga Practice

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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