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The effects of a brief mindfulness exercise on state mindfulness and affective outcomes among adult daily smokers
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- 자료유형학술지논문
- 저자명Luberto, Christina M.,McLeish, Alison C.
- 학회/출판사/기관명Elsevier Science B.V., Amsterdam.
- 출판년도2018
- 언어영어
- 학술지명/학위논문주기Addictive behaviors
- 발행사항Vol.77No.-[2018]_x000D_
- ISBN/ISSN0306-4603
- 소개/요약Brief, single session mindfulness training has been shown to reduce emotional distress, craving, and withdrawal symptoms among smokers when they are nicotine-deprived. However, no research has examined the efficacy of brief mindfulness training for non-nicotine-deprived smokers, or explored its effects on smokers' ability to tolerate emotional distress. Smokers progress differently through various stages as they attempt to change their smoking behavior and evidence-based strategies are needed for smokers at all levels of nicotine deprivation. Therefore, the purpose of the current study was to examine the effects of a brief mindfulness exercise on state mindfulness, distress, distress tolerance, and smoking urges following a distressing laboratory task among 86 non-nicotine-deprived adult daily smokers (Mage=46years, 55% male, 74% African-American) who completed behavioral tasks and self-report measures before and after randomization to a 10-min mindfulness or control exercise. As hypothesized, the mindfulness exercise significantly increased state mindfulness [F=14.24, p=0.00, η(2)partial=0.15] and demonstrated a non-significant small to medium effect on decreased distress levels [F=3.22, p=0.08, η(2)partial=0.04]. Contrary to prediction, it was not associated with improvements in self-reported [F=2.68, p=0.11, η(2)partial=0.03] or behavioral distress tolerance [F(1)=0.75, p=0.39, η(2)partial=0.01], or smoking urges following a stressor [F=0.22, p=0.64, η(2)partial=0.00.] These findings suggest that brief mindfulness exercises successfully induce states of mindfulness in non-nicotine-deprived smokers. These exercises might also improve current moment levels of distress, but they do not appear to improve self-report or behavioral indices of distress tolerance.
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