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The effect of self-compassion versus mindfulness interventions on autonomic responses to stress in generalized anxiety disorders

Psychology

The effect of self-compassion versus mindfulness interventions on autonomic responses to stress in generalized anxiety disorders

X. Qi, Y. Shen, et al.

Patients with generalized anxiety disorder completed a stress task before and after 2-week treatment as usual (TAU) combined with either a self-compassion or mindfulness intervention. The study found that self-compassion uniquely reduced heart-rate response to stress, while both interventions lowered state anxiety and negative affect and increased positive affect. This research was conducted by Xuejun Qi, Yonghui Shen, Xianwei Che, Ying Wang, Xi Luo, and Lijun Sun.... show more
Abstract
Objective: Although research on psychological interventions in generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) has provided evidence of their effectiveness regarding self-reported outcomes, few studies have examined their psychophysiological effects. Heart rate is emerging as a potential biomarker of efficacy in anxiety disorders. This study aimed to investigate the effects of a self-compassion intervention versus a mindfulness intervention on physiological arousal in response to induced stress. Methods: Forty-seven patients with GAD had heart rate data collected during a stress task before and after a 2-week pharmacological treatment (known as treatment as usual, TAU), a self-compassion intervention + TAU or a mindfulness intervention + TAU. They also reported state anxiety, positive affect, and negative affect at pre- and post- intervention before the stress task. ANOVAs were conducted to analyze the effects on electrocardiogram data self- reported measurements. Results: Self-compassion intervention uniquely decreased heart rate response to a stressor whereas mindfulness intervention did not. Both treatments decreased state anxiety and negative affect to a stressor, while increased positive affect in this context. We also demonstrated a significant correlation between decreased heart rate response and less negative emotions. Conclusion: The Findings provides novel physiological evidence that self-compassion interventions buffer stress reactivity in individuals with GAD. Attention shall be paid to the limitations in small and unequal sample size and a non-randomized study design.
Publisher
Frontiers in Psychiatry
Published On
Feb 04, 2025
Authors
Xuejun Qi, Yonghui Shen, Xianwei Che, Ying Wang, Xi Luo, Lijun Sun
Tags
generalized anxiety disorder
self-compassion intervention
mindfulness intervention
heart rate
physiological arousal
stress reactivity
treatment as usual (TAU)
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