| Literature DB >> 28776094 |
Carl Antonson1, Frida Thorsén1, Jan Sundquist1, Kristina Sundquist2,3.
Abstract
Psychiatric symptoms and stress are on the increase among Swedish adolescents. We aimed to study the potential effect and feasibility of two Internet-based self-help programmes, one mindfulness based (iMBI) and the other music based in a randomised controlled trial that targeted adolescents. A total of 283 upper secondary school students in two Swedish schools were randomised to either a waiting list or one of the two programmes, on their own incentive, on schooltime. General psychiatric health (Symptoms Checklist 90), sleep quality (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index), and perceived stress (Perceived Stress Scale) were assessed before and after the interventions. In total, 202 participants answered the questionnaires. Less than 20 logged into each intervention and only 1 performed a full intervention (iMBI). No significant differences in any of the scales were found between those who logged in and those who did not. The potential effect of Internet-based self-help programmes was not possible to examine due to low compliance rates. Adolescents seem to have a very low compliance with Internet-based self-help programmes if left to their own incentive. There were no associations between the psychiatric and stress-related symptoms at baseline and compliance in any of the intervention groups, and no evidence for differences in compliance in relation to the type of programme. Additional studies are needed to examine how compliance rates can be increased in Internet-based self-help mindfulness programmes in adolescents, as the potentially positive effects of mindfulness are partly related to compliance rates.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescence; Compliance; Internet; Mindfulness; Psychiatric symptoms; Psychological stress
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28776094 PMCID: PMC5842245 DOI: 10.1007/s00787-017-1035-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry ISSN: 1018-8827 Impact factor: 4.785
Fig. 1CONSORT flowchart of the study in terms of compliance to the interventions. The participant who logged into both interventions was excluded after the randomisation. The percentages in the intervention groups are the proportions of the randomised participants assigned to each intervention. Interventions: iMBI Internet-based mindfulness-based intervention, iMT Internet-based music therapy, and WL waiting list
Differences between those who logged in to at least one session and those who did not log into the self-help programmes (i.e. iMBI Internet-based mindfulness-based intervention and iMT Internet-based musical therapy) in general psychiatric symptoms (GSI from Symptoms Checklist-90), perceived stress (PSS Perceived Stress Scale-14), and sleep quality (PSQI Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index)
| Scale | IMBI | IMT | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Logged in | Not logged in |
| Logged in | Not logged in |
| |
| GSI | 13 | 63 | 15 | 56 | ||
| GSI mean (SD) | 0.96 (0.46) | 0.84 (0.57) | 0.78 (0.53) | 0.83 (0.47) | ||
| GSI CI | 0.68–1.24 | 0.70–0.98 | 0.30a | 0.48–1.07 | 0.71–0.96 | 0.59a |
| PSS | 15 | 56 | 14 | 56 | ||
| PSS mean (SD) | 29.4 (7.43) | 30 (8.52) | 0.41b | 30.7 (9.49) | 28.7 (6.96) | 0.82b |
| PSS CI | 25.3–33.5 | 27.7–32.3 | 25.2–36.2 | 26.8–30.5 | ||
| PSQI | 14 | 57 | 13 | 55 | ||
| PSQI mean (SD) | 5.93 (0.89) | 6.93 (0.42) | 6.69 (3.20) | 6.09 (2.53) | ||
| PSQI CI | 4.0–7.86 | 6.09–7.77 | 0.40a | 4.76–8.62 | 5.41–6.77 | 0.65a |
a Skewed distribution—Wilcoxon rank sum
b Normal distribution—Student’s t test