| Literature DB >> 30294385 |
Sharon Simpson1, Stewart Mercer1, Robert Simpson1, Maggie Lawrence2, Sally Wyke3.
Abstract
Youth offending is a problem worldwide. Young people in the criminal justice system have frequently experienced adverse childhood circumstances, mental health problems, difficulties regulating emotions and poor quality of life. Mindfulness-based interventions can help people manage problems resulting from these experiences, but their usefulness for youth offending populations is not clear. This review evaluated existing evidence for mindfulness-based interventions among such populations. To be included, each study used an intervention with at least one of the three core components of mindfulness-based stress reduction (breath awareness, body awareness, mindful movement) that was delivered to young people in prison or community rehabilitation programs. No restrictions were placed on methods used. Thirteen studies were included: three randomized controlled trials, one controlled trial, three pre-post study designs, three mixed-methods approaches and three qualitative studies. Pooled numbers (n = 842) comprised 99% males aged between 14 and 23. Interventions varied so it was not possible to identify an optimal approach in terms of content, dose or intensity. Studies found some improvement in various measures of mental health, self-regulation, problematic behaviour, substance use, quality of life and criminal propensity. In those studies measuring mindfulness, changes did not reach statistical significance. Qualitative studies reported participants feeling less stressed, better able to concentrate, manage emotions and behaviour, improved social skills and that the interventions were acceptable. Generally low study quality limits the generalizability of these findings. Greater clarity on intervention components and robust mixed-methods evaluation would improve clarity of reporting and better guide future youth offending prevention programs.Entities:
Keywords: Incarcerated; Meditation; Mindfulness; Offending; Scoping review
Year: 2018 PMID: 30294385 PMCID: PMC6153893 DOI: 10.1007/s12671-018-0892-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mindfulness (N Y) ISSN: 1868-8527
Fig. 1Flow diagram for paper screening results
Study characteristics
| Variables | Description |
|---|---|
| Country | USA ( |
| India ( | |
| Study design | Randomized controlled trial (RCT) ( |
| Non-randomized controlled trial (CT) ( | |
| Pre-post ( | |
| Mixed-methods ( | |
| Qualitative ( | |
| Population | Male adolescent offenders ( |
| Mixed gender: male adolescent and female adult ( | |
| Mixed gender: male adolescent and female adolescent ( | |
| Intervention type | Mind body awareness (MBA) ( |
| Structured mindfulness meditation ( | |
| Mindfulness meditation and cognitive therapy ( | |
| Mindfulness-based substance use (MBSU) intervention ( | |
| Mindfulness via the Internet ( | |
| One-to-one mindfulness ( | |
| Vipassana ( | |
| Outcome measured | Mental health ( |
| Mindfulness ( | |
| Problematic behaviour ( | |
| Self-regulation and emotional states ( | |
| Quality of life and wellbeing ( | |
| Substance use ( | |
| Personality, social and relational attitudes ( |
aOne study reports on five disparate studies; the main study design used was pre-post
Scoping review: study details, population, intervention type and main outcomes
| No. | Study | Population | Intervention | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Randomized controlled trials | ||||
| 1 | Himelstein et al. ( | Male adolescents ( | 1:1 | Treatment group showed significantly greater increases in quality of life (ES = 0.60, |
| 2 | Evans-Chase ( | Male adolescents ( | IBM | The oldest age group (19–23) in the treatment group scored significantly higher in self-regulation ability ( |
| 3 | Leonard et al. ( | Male adolescents ( | CBT/MM | Overall task performance on the attention network test degraded in all participants. However, the magnitude of degradation was significantly less for the treatment group (ES = 0.30, |
| Non-randomized controlled trials | ||||
| 4 | Flinton ( | Male adolescents ( | SMP | SMP group, compared to controls, showed significant improvements in mental health (anxiety: ES = 1.14, |
| Pre-post studies | ||||
| 5 | Le and Proulx ( | Male and female adolescents ( | MBA | MBA participants showed significant improvements in mental wellbeing (stress: ES = 1.00, |
| 6 | Himelstein et al. ( | Male adolescent ( | MBA | Participants showed significant improvements in mental health (stress: ES = 0.42, |
| 7 | Khurana and Dhar ( | Male adolescents ( | VM | A significant improvement was seen in subjective wellbeing (SWB) ( |
| Mixed-methods | ||||
| 8 | Evans-Chase ( | Male adolescents ( | IBM | No significant difference found on self-reported mindfulness (ES = 0.12, |
| 9 | Barnert et al. ( | Male adolescents ( | MBA | Participants showed a significant increase in self-regulation (ES = 0.44, |
| 10 | Himelstein ( | Male adolescents ( | MBSU | The results showed a significant decrease in impulsivity (ES = 0.43, |
| From the focus group discussions, 3 major themes were identified: receptivity to the program in general, appreciation of the facilitators teaching style and learning about drugs | ||||
| Observational; semi-structured interviews | ||||
| 11 | Himelstein et al. ( | Male adolescents ( | 1:1 | The main themes identified were as follows: enhanced psychological mindfulness and wellbeing, development of worldview, novel experiences, challenging experiences and future use |
| 12 | Himelstein et al. ( | Male adolescents ( | MBA | Main themes identified were as follows: increased wellbeing, improved self-regulation, increased awareness and an accepting attitude towards the intervention |
| 13 | Derezotes ( | Male adolescent sex offenders; it is unclear how many participants were used in this study | SMP | The participants reported feeling more relaxed, having improved concentration, improved impulse control and being less disturbed by thoughts. Being treated with respect, care and humanness was also identified as important. Parents and facilitators were supportive of the course |
Attrition rates as defined by intervention completion
| Study (country) | Study design | Intervention (sample size) | Non-completers (%) | Reason ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Le and Proulx ( | Pre, post | MBA ( | 8 | Lost interest (2) |
| Barnert et al. ( | CT | MBA (n = 29) | 10 | Released (6) |
| Himelstein ( | Pre, post | MBSU ( | 20 | Released (12) |
| Flinton ( | CT | SMP ( | 30 | Administrative issues (16)* |
| Released (4) | ||||
| Himelstein et al. ( | Pre, post | MBA ( | 40 | Released (15) |
Study design: randomized controlled trial (RCT) and non-randomized controlled trial (CT)
Interventions used: mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) and mind body awareness (MBA)
MBSU mindfulness-based substance use, SMP structured meditation program
*A whole cohort was removed from the study as one of the camps failed to adhere to the study requirements, removing participants from the group and adding new members who had not completed baseline measures
Attrition rates as defined by data collection
| Study (country) | Study design | Intervention (sample size) | Attrition rate (%) | Reason ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leonard et al. ( | RCT | MM-CBT | 25* | Transfer/release (20%) |
| Corrupt computer files (3%) | ||||
| Refusal (1.5%) | ||||
| Deportation (0.5%) | ||||
| Himelstein et al. ( | RCT | I:I | 39 | Released (21%) |
| Incomplete measures (18%) | ||||
| Evans-Chase ( | RCT | IBM | 56 | Release from custody (31%) |
| Withdrawal from the study (13%) | ||||
| On lockdown (5.5%) | ||||
| Removed from analysis (5.5%) | ||||
| Incomplete measures (1%) |
Study design: randomized controlled trial (RCT)
Interventions used: Internet-based mindfulness (IBM), one-to-one (1:1) mindfulness, mindfulness meditation and cognitive behavioural therapy (MM-CBT)
*This figure represents attrition at 15 weeks of follow-up. Attrition immediately post intervention was 42%