Improve Depression in International Students with Positive Coping with Mindfulness

Improve Depression in International Students with Positive Coping with Mindfulness

 

with practice, meditation can help many people control how they react to the stress and anxiety that often leads to depression,” – John Denninger

 

By John M. de Castro, Ph.D.

 

Depression affects over 6% of the population. It is common in college students. There is a lot of pressure on college students to excel so that they can get the best jobs after graduation. This can lead to stress, anxiety and depression which can impede the student’s physical and mental health, well-being, and school performance. International students face the additional stress of being immersed in an alien culture and being separated from family and friends. Mindfulness training is an alternative treatment for depression. It has been shown to be an effective treatment for depression and its recurrence and even in the cases where drugs fail. It is important to determine if mindfulness training can help to relieve depression in international college students.

 

In today’s Research News article “The Mediating Effects of Coping Style on the Effects of Breath Count Mindfulness Training on Depressive Symptoms among International Students in China.” (See summary below or view the full text of the study at: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7474765/ ) Gu and colleagues recruited foreign college students in china and randomly assigned them to receive no treatment, but encouraged to exercise, or 8-weeks for 2-hours per week of either normal college counseling or Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) program that emphasized attention to the breath. They were measured before and after training for depression, life events including family life, work and study life, and family and friends’ life, and positive and negative coping. In addition, saliva samples were taken and assayed for cortisol levels.

 

They found that in general international college students had mild levels of depression and that the higher the levels of depression the greater the problems with life events and the lower the coping ability. They found that both mindfulness training and normal counseling, but not exercise, resulted in significant reductions in depression and cortisol levels. In addition, those students who had positive coping styles had greater reductions in depression after mindfulness training than either of the other groups.

 

That mindfulness training can reduce depression, especially with or Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) has been well documented in prior research. Additionally, it found that students with positive coping styles benefited the most from the therapy. Additionally, it found that students with positive coping styles benefited the most from the therapy. In addition, mindfulness training reduced cortisol levels suggesting a reduction in stress levels in these students. Again, mindfulness training has been previously been shown to reduce cortisol levels and stress. The contribution of the present study is that it demonstrates that mindfulness training is effective in reducing stress and depression in international students.

 

It is interesting that MBCT training was no more effective than traditional college counseling. MBCT training was specifically developed to treat depression. So, it is surprising that it was not superior to normal counselling. It is possible that since the students were only mildly depressed in the first place there was limited ability to show improvement creating a floor effect. Indeed, depression index levels at the end of training indicated no depression was present at all following training. Perhaps if the students were more depressed to start with, MBCT training would have a greater opportunity to demonstrate superiority. Nevertheless, it is clear that mindfulness training can reduce the depression found in international students especially in students who have strong positive coping ability.

 

So, improve depression in international students with positive coping with mindfulness.

 

Depression makes someone more likely to react to life’s setbacks with negative, judgmental thinking, which can lower their mood and trigger a new episode. Mindfulness helps create mental space around these thoughts, enabling people at risk to observe, with kindness, the patterns of the mind that might otherwise drag them down.” – Ed Halliwell

 

CMCS – Center for Mindfulness and Contemplative Studies

 

This and other Contemplative Studies posts are also available on Google+ https://plus.google.com/106784388191201299496/posts and on Twitter @MindfulResearch

 

Study Summary

 

Gu, S., Li, Y., Liang, F., Feng, R., Zeng, Z., & Wang, F. (2020). The Mediating Effects of Coping Style on the Effects of Breath Count Mindfulness Training on Depressive Symptoms among International Students in China. Neural plasticity, 2020, 8859251. https://doi.org/10.1155/2020/8859251

 

Abstract

Mindfulness training has gained popularity in the scientific field and has been proposed as an efficient way for emotional regulation. Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) is designed especially for depressive people in reducing risk of depression relapse and is recommended in national guidelines as a treatment choice for relapse prevention in recurrent depression. The aim of the current study was to investigate the effects of mindfulness training on depressive symptoms of international students and probe into the mediating role of mindfulness in stressful events and depression. In addition, we introduced a new kind of mindfulness training, the breathing exercise-based mindfulness training, which is based on the integration of Buddhism and Daoism. Self-report questionnaires assessing the coping style, abnormal depressive behavior, and stressful live events were completed in 260 international students in China (mean age = 21.4 years). The results showed that (1) many international students showed depression symptoms, (2) stressful life events play a completely mediating role in the initiation of depression and anxiety, and (3) mindfulness training for 8 weeks significantly reduced the depressive symptoms, and it was also related to a positive coping style. This study has certain theoretical significance in exploring the mechanism of the occurrence and development of depression among international students and provides useful tools for this special group of international students. In addition, the international students can also learn Chinese culture through the training. These findings indicate that mindfulness training and positive coping style are interrelated with treating depressive symptoms for international students.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7474765/

 

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