| Literature DB >> 34559347 |
Sarah J Egan1,2, Clare S Rees3, Joanna Delalande3, Danyelle Greene3, Grace Fitzallen3, Samantha Brown3, Marianne Webb3, Amy Finlay-Jones3,4.
Abstract
Previous meta-analyses have found higher self-compassion is associated with lower anxiety and depression. The aim of this study was to investigate the efficacy of self-compassion as an active ingredient in the treatment and prevention of anxiety and depression in youth. This was conducted through (i) a systematic review of the literature and (ii) qualitative consultation with young people and researchers in self-compassion. Fifty studies met our inclusion criteria. Eight studies evaluated self-compassion interventions among youth aged 14-24, and the remaining studies measured the association between self-compassion and anxiety, and/or depression among this age group. Qualitative interviews were conducted with four self-compassion researchers. Interviews were also conducted in two rounds of consultation with 20 young people (M age = 18.85 years, age range 14-24 years). Higher self-compassion was related to lower symptoms of anxiety, r = - 0.49, 95% CI (- 0.57, - 0.42), and depression, r = - 0.50, 95% CI (- 0.53, - 0.47). There was evidence for self-compassion interventions in decreasing anxiety and depression in young people. Consultation with young people indicated they were interested in self-compassion interventions; however, treatment should be available in a range of formats and tailored to address diversity. Self-compassion experts emphasised the importance of decreasing self-criticism as a reason why self-compassion interventions work. The importance of targeting self-criticism is supported by the preferences of young people who said they would be more likely to engage in a treatment reducing self-criticism than increasing self-kindness. Future research is required to add to the emerging evidence for self-compassion interventions decreasing symptoms of anxiety and depression in young people.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescents; Anxiety; Depression; Review; Self-compassion; Youth
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34559347 PMCID: PMC9005396 DOI: 10.1007/s10488-021-01170-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adm Policy Ment Health ISSN: 0894-587X
Search terms and selection criteria
| Compassion | Psychopathology/Wellbeing | MeSH Terms |
|---|---|---|
| Self-compassion | Anxiety | Anxiety disorders |
| Compassionate mind | Generalised anxiety disorder | Depression |
| Compassion | Depression | Mental health |
| Self-kindness | Mental health | Panic disorder |
| Self-soothing | Emotion regulation | Emotional regulation |
| Loving-kindness | Specific phobia | Psychological distress |
| Self-warmth | Panic | Obsessive–compulsive disorder |
Interview questions with research experts
| Interview questions | |
|---|---|
| 1 | How do you define self-compassion? |
| 2 | In your experience, how is self-compassion experienced by young people? |
| 3 | In your experience, how is self-compassion relevant for young people with or at-risk of depression and anxiety? |
| 4 | Do you consider self-compassion to be an active ingredient in interventions for prevention or treatment of anxiety and depression in young people? Why or why not? |
| 5 | Do you think self-compassion interventions should be modified for young people aged 14–24 compared to treatments for adults? If so, how? |
| 6 | What would you say are the most important components of self-compassion treatments relevant to young people? |
| 7 | What do you think are the best formats for self-compassion interventions in young people? |
| 8 | Do you have any further opinions you could offer to help in this research? |
Interviews lasted 20–35 min. Experts were given a AUD$25 Amazon voucher
Youth advisory group demographics, interview type and length
| YAG demographics | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | Number | Percentage | |
| Male | 6 | 30% | |
| Female | 12 | 60% | |
| Non-binary | 2 | 10% | |
| Age | Range | Mean | SD |
| 14–24 | M = 18.85 | SD = 3.63 | |
| Lived experience anxiety/depression | Confirmed lived experience | Drawing on friends’ experience | Unknown |
| N = 11 | N = 6 | N = 3 | |
YAG Youth Advisory Group, SD Standard Deviation
Interview questions with youth advisory group
| Phase 1 | Self-compassion in relation to lived experience of anxiety and depression |
|---|---|
| 1 | Is self-compassion something you have heard of before? If so, in what context? |
| 2 | What do you think self-compassion is? |
| 3 | How do you think self-compassion relates to your own, or your friends, experiences of symptoms of depression (feeling down) or anxiety (feeling worried all the time)? |
| 4 | Do you think there are any difficulties with the idea of self-compassion? If so, please tell me more? (For example, do you think there are any groups of people who might struggle with the idea of self-compassion?) |
| 5 | Do you think a programme aimed at increasing self-compassion might help to prevent anxiety and depression? If so, how? |
| 6 | How do you think self-compassion can be useful in psychological interventions? Why? |
| 7 | In what format would you prefer to receive an intervention programme? (For example, online guided or unguided, face to face, self-help booklet etc.?) |
| 8 | Do you think an intervention aimed at increasing self-compassion (being kind to yourself) would be helpful to you or other young people with anxiety and depression? |
| 9 | What do you think researchers should consider when thinking about self-compassion, anxiety and depression in young people? |
Fig. 1PRISMA flowchart outlining the search process
Study characteristics of all studies included in the systematic review
| First author | Qa | Sample size | Sample | Mean age(range/SD) | %female | Country | Study type | Measure Anxiety | Measure Depression |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arch et al. ( | 1 | 105 | University students | 19.53 (SD = 1.88) | 100% | USA | RCT | STAI, SPS, SIAS | |
| Arimitsu ( | 1 | 40 | University students with low self-compassion | 23.25 (I) (SD = 7.41) 19.42 (C) (SD = 1.08) | 75% | Japan | RCT | STAI | BDI-II |
| Bluth et al. ( | 1 | 28 | Middle school and high school students | NR (10–18) | 57% | USA | NRS | PSS | PSS |
| Bluth et al. ( | 1 | 34 | High school students | NR (14–17) | 74% | USA | RCT | STAI | SMFQ |
| Burke et al. ( | 1b | 72 | University students with mild-moderate depressive symptoms | 19.33 (SD = 1.20;18–23) | 65% | USA | Prospective | STAI | BDI |
| Ko et al. ( | 1b | 41 | University students | 19.78 (SD = 1.36; 18–22 | 66% | USA | RCT | STAI | CES-D |
| Polizzi et al. ( | 1 | 131 | University students | 18.96 (SD = 1.00) | 57% | USA | RCT | STAI | CES-D |
| Smeets et al. ( | 1 | 52 | University students | 19.96 (SD = 1.33) | 100% | Netherlands | RCT | Penn State Worry | |
| Arimitsu and Hofmann ( | 2 | S1:231S2: 233 | University students | 19.11(SD = 0.88; S1), 19 (SD = 0.97; S2) | S1: 43% S2: 28% | Japan | Cross-sectional | STAI | BDI-II |
| Asano et al. ( | 2 | 279 | University students | 19.35 (SD = 3.26; 18–23) | 69% (6 NR) | Japan | Cross-sectional | DASS-15 | DASS-15 |
| Bluth et al. ( | 2 | 765 | High school students | NR (11–19) | 53% | USA | Cross-sectional | STAI | SMFQ |
| Castilho et al. ( | 2 | 1101 | Community adolescents | 15.94 (SD = 1.21; 14–18) | 57% | Portugal | Cross-sectional | CDI | |
| Cunha et al. ( | 2 | 3165 | High school students | 15.49 ( SD = 1.59; 12–19) | 54% | Portugal | Cross-sectional | DASS-21 | DASS-21 |
| Ferrari et al. ( | 2 | 541 | High school students | 14.1 (SD = NR; 12–15) | 82% | Australia | Cross-sectional | SMFQ | |
| Ferrari et al. (unpublished) | 2 | 951 | High school students | 13.69 (SD = 0.73; 12–16) | 46% | Australia | Cross-sectional | SCAS | |
| Galla ( | 2 | 132 | Community adolescents | 16.76 (SD = 1.48; 13.8–20.3) | 61% | USA | Longitudinal | CES-DC | |
| Garcia-Campayo et al. ( | 2 | 268 | University students | 20.54 (SD = 2.11) | 60% | Spain | Cross-sectional | STAI | BDI-II |
| Ghorbani et al. ( | 2 | 238 | Iranian Muslim University students | 21.60 (SD = 2.40) | 52% | Iran | Cross-sectional | Costello and Comrey Anxiety scale | Costello and Comrey Depression Scale |
| Gill et al. ( | 2 | 316 | High school students | 14.77 (SD = 0.89; 14–18) | 46% | UK | Cross-sectional | SCARED, SPIN | |
| Hall et al. ( | 2 | 182 | University students | NR | 77% | USA | Cross-sectional | BDI-II | |
| Hou et al. ( | 2 | 578 | University students | 20.30 (SD = 1.29; 17–24) | 48% | China | Cross-sectional | BDI-I | |
| Kemper et al. ( | 2 | 29 | Hospital migraine outpatients | 14.80 (SD = 2.00; 12–18) | 69% | USA | Cross-sectional | PROMIS Short-Form Paediatric Anxiety Scale | PROMIS Short-Form Paediatric Depression Scale |
| Lahtinen et al. (2019) | 2 | 2383 | High school students | NR(16–18) | 52% | Finland | Cross-sectional | BDI-II-R | |
| Lathren et al. ( | 2 | 1057 | High school students | 14.70 (SD = NR) | 65% | USA | Cross-sectional | STAI | SMFQ |
| Luo et al. ( | 2 | 1453 | University students | 19.58 ( SD = 1.09; 17–23) | 99% | China | Cross-sectional | GADS | |
| Mingkwan et al. ( | 2 | 390 | University students | NR(18–22) | 63% | Thailand | Cross-sectional | TMHQ | THMQ |
| Miron et al ( | 2 | 377 | University students | 19.12 (SD = 1.73) | 64% | USA | Cross-sectional | DASS-21 | |
| Neff ( | 2 | S1:391S2:232 | University students | 20.91 (SD = 2.27;S1) 21.31 (SD = 3.17; S2) | S1: 42% S2: 62% | USA | Cross-sectional | STAI | BDI-II, Zung self-rating depression scale |
| Neff et al ( | 2 | 568 | University students American, Thai, Thaiwanese | 24.1/19.8/20.5 (SD = NR) | 59% | USA | Cross-sectional | Zung Self-Rating Depression Scale | |
| Podina et al. ( | 2 | 187 | University students | 23.62 (SD = 5.64) | 81% | USA | Cross-sectional | BDI-II | |
| Rabon et al. ( | 2 | 356 | Rural university students | 21.44 (SD = 5.16) | 68% | USA | Cross-sectional | CES-D | |
| Raes ( | 2 | 271 | University students | 18.14 (SD = 1.25) | 79% | Belgium | Cross-sectional | STAI-T | BDI-II |
| Stefan et al. ( | 2 | 63 | University students | 18.76 (SD = 0.43) | 75% | Romania | RCT | LSAS-SR | |
| Stephenson et al. ( | 2 | 184 | University students | 19.20 (SD = 1.50) | 52% | USA | Cross-sectional | Costello and Comrey Depression and anxiety scales | Costello and Comrey Depression and anxiety scales |
| Stutts et al. ( | 2 | 462 | University students | NR (18–20) | 72% | USA | Longitudinal | SCL-90 | SCL-90 |
| Svendsen et al. ( | 2 | 277 | University students | 22.9 (SD = 3.6) | 56% | Norway | Cross-sectional | SCL-90-R | |
| Tanaka et al. ( | 2 | 117 | Adolescents involved with child welfare | 18.10 (SD = 1.00; 16–20) | 61% | Canada | Cross-sectional | CES-D | |
| Terry et al. ( | 2 | 119 | University students | NR | 47% (5 NR) | USA | Longitudinal | CES-D | |
| Van der Gucht et al. ( | 2 | 408 | High school students | 15.40 (SD = 1.20) | 58% | Belgium | RCT | DASS-21 | DASS-21 |
| Wilson et al. ( | 2 | 228 | University Students | 19.84(SD = 2.75) | 76% | USA | Cross-sectional | CES-D | |
| Woodruff et al. ( | 2 | 147 | University students | NR (17–23) | 71% | USA | Cross-sectional | BAI | BDI |
| Yamaguchi et al. ( | 2 | S1:1200 S2: 420 | University students: Japanese and American | S1 = 19.6 (SD = 0.97); S2 = 21 (SD = 3.62) | S1: 36% S2: 76% | S1: Japan S2: USA | Cross-sectional | CES-D | |
| Zeifman et al. ( | 2 | 130 | University students | 21.04 (SD = 6.30; 17–60) | 83% | Canada | Cross-sectional | DASS-21 | |
| Zhang and Wang ( | 2 | 112 | University students with physical disabilities | 21.24 (SD = 2.66) | 42% | China | Cross-sectional | CES-D | |
| Zhou et al. ( | 2 | 418 | University students | 19.17 (SD = 1.04; 16–23) | 74% | China | Cross-sectional | HDSQ | |
| Zhou et al. ( | 2 | 330 | University students | 19.90 (SD = 1.30; 16–24) | 37% | China | Cross-sectional | BAI | BDI |
N sample size, NR not reported, NA not applicable, RCT Randomised Control Trial, NRS Non-Randomised Control Study, BAI Beck Anxiety Inventory, BDI-II Beck Depression Inventory-II, CDC Centre of Disease Control, CDEQ Children’s Depressive Experiences Questionnaire, CDI Children’s Depression Inventory, CESD Centre for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale, DASS-15 Japanese version of DASS-21, DASS-21 Depression Anxiety and Stress Scale, GAD-II Generalized Anxiety Disorder Screener, GADS Goldberg Anxiety and Depression Scale, LSAS-SR Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale, HDSQ Hopelessness Depression Symptom Questionnaire, PROMIS Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Information System, PSS The Perceived Stress Scale, SCAS Spence Children’s Anxiety Scale, SCARED Screen for Child Anxiety Related Emotional Disorders, SCL-90 Symptom checklist, SIAS Social interaction Anxiety Scale, SMFQ The Short Mood and Feeling Questionnaire, SPIN Social Phobia Inventory, SPS Social Phobia Scale, STAI Spielberger State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, TMHQ Thai mental health questionnaire
aRelated review question
bAlso included in review question 2
cInconsistency in reporting of sample size
Quality assessment ratings of studies in the systematic review using the NIH Quality Rating Tool for Cross-Sectional and Observational Studies
| Study Authors | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | Rating (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arch et al. ( | • | ~ | ~ | • | • | • | • | • | ~ | • | • | • | 64.29 | ||
| Arimitsu and Hofmann ( | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | 55.56 | ||||
| Arimitsu ( | • | ~ | ~ | ~ | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | • | • | • | 50.00 | |
| Asano et al. ( | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | 66.67 | |||
| Bluth et al. ( | ~ | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | • | • | 42.86 | |||||
| Bluth et al. ( | ~ | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | • | • | ~ | • | • | • | 57.14 | ||
| Bluth et al. ( | • | • | • | • | ~ | • | • | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | 90.00 | ||
| Burke et al. ( | ~ | ~ | ~ | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | • | 35.71 | ||||
| Castilho et al. ( | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | • | ~ | ~ | 66.67 | |||
| Cunha et al. ( | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | 66.67 | |||
| Ferrari et al. ( | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | 77.78 | ||
| Ferrari et al. (unpublished) | • | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | 80.00 | ||
| Galla ( | • | • | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | • | ~ | • | • | 90.91 | |
| Garcia-Campayo et al. ( | • | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | 77.78 | ||
| Ghorbani et al. ( | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | 77.78 | ||
| Gill et al. ( | • | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | 88.89 | |
| Hall et al. ( | • | • | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | 70.00 | |||
| Hou et al. ( | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | 77.78 | ||
| Kemper et al. ( | • | • | ~ | • | • | • | • | • | • | ~ | ~ | 72.73 | |||
| Ko et al. ( | • | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | • | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | 71.43 |
| Lahtinen et al. (2019) | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | 88.89 | |
| Lathren et al. ( | • | • | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | 80.00 | ||
| Lihua et al. (2017) | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | 66.67 | |||
| Luo et al. ( | • | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | 60.00 | ||||
| Mingkwan et al. ( | • | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | 77.78 | ||
| Miron et al. ( | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | • | ~ | ~ | 77.78 | ||
| Neff ( | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | 66.67 | |||
| Neff et al. ( | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | 66.67 | |||
| Podina et al. ( | • | ~ | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | 55.56 | ||||
| Polizzi et al. ( | ~ | ~ | ~ | ~ | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | • | • | 35.71 | |||
| Rabon et al. ( | • | ~ | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | 44.44 | |||||
| Raes ( | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | 77.78 | ||
| Smeets et al. ( | • | • | ~ | ~ | ~ | • | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | 57.14 |
| Stephenson et al. ( | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | 66.67 | |||
| Stefan (2019) | • | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | 80.00 | ||
| Stutts et al. ( | • | ~ | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | 66.67 | |||
| Svendsen et al. ( | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | 66.67 | |||
| Tanaka et al. ( | • | • | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | 80.00 | ||
| Terry et al. ( | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | 77.78 | ||
| van der Gucht et al. ( | • | ~ | ~ | ~ | ~ | ~ | ~ | ~ | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | 28.57 | |
| Wilson et al. ( | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | 77.78 | ||
| Woodruff et al. ( | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | 55.56 | ||||
| Yamaguchi et al. ( | • | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | 77.78 | ||
| Zeifman et al. ( | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | 66.67 | |||
| Zhang and Wang ( | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | • | 77.78 | ||
| Zhou et al. ( | • | • | ~ | • | ~ | • | • | ~ | ~ | 50.00 |
Study quality was assessed using the NIH Quality Assessment tools; 14-item scales to evaluate internal validity (National Institutes of Health, 2014). Scores were calculated as the average of applicable items and are represented as a percentage. Appropriate reporting for items in each article is indicated with a dot (i.e., bullet points refer to the criteria being met)
aStudies were assessed using the NIH Quality Rating for Controlled Interventions Scale; ~ Item was deemed Not Applicable (NA), Cannot Determine (CD), or Not Reported (NR)
Meta-regressions for the associations between self-compassion and anxiety (left), and self-compassion and depression (right)
| Anxiety | Depression | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| B | SE | 95% CI [lower, Upper] | B | SE | 95% CI [lower, Upper] | ||
| Intercept | − 0.69*** | 0.065 | [− 0.82, − 0.57] | Intercept | − 0.52*** | 0.043 | [− 0.07, 0.10] |
| Medium Qualitya | 0.10 | 0.068 | [− 0.03, 0.24] | Medium Qualitya | − 0.03 | 0.038 | [− 0.01, 0.14] |
| High Qualitya | 0.17* | 0.065 | [0.04, 0.29] | High Qualitya | 0.02 | 0.034 | [− 0.15, − 0.01] |
| DASSb | 0.52*** | 0.058 | [0.40, 0.63] | DASSd | 0.07 | 0.054 | [− 0.16, 0.05] |
| SCASb | 0.06 | 0.041 | [− 0.02, 0.14] | SMFQd | − 0.08* | 0.037 | [− 0.07, 0.08] |
| Costellob | 0.11 | 0.068 | [0.02, 0.24] | CDId | − 0.05 | 0.070 | [− 0.12, 0.15] |
| SCAREDb | − 0.02 | 0.056 | [− 0.13,0.09] | CES − Dd | 0.01 | 0.069 | [− 0.13, 0.14] |
| PROMISb | 0.18 | 0.177 | [− 0.17, 0.53] | ZUNGd | 0.02 | 0.052 | [0.06, 0.27] |
| BAIb | 0.19** | 0.079 | [0.04, 0.35] | Costellod | 0.01 | 0.146 | [− 0.40,0.17] |
| SCLb | 0.32*** | 0.049 | [0.23, 0.42] | SCLd | 0.17** | 0.031 | [0.06, 0.27] |
| Chinac | 0.17 | 0.093 | [− 0.01, 0.35] | PROMISd | − 0.11 | 0.043 | [− 0.40, 0.17] |
| Japanc | − 0.13*** | 0.037 | [− 0.20, − 0.05] | Japanc | 0.13*** | 0.061 | [0.07, 0.19] |
| Portugalc | − 0.31*** | 0.063 | [− 0.43, − 0.18] | Portugalc | − 0.01 | 0.068 | [− 0.10, 0.07] |
| Spainc | − 0.01 | 0.060 | [− 0.13, 0.10] | Australiac | − 0.18** | 0.095 | [− 0.30, − 0.06] |
| Belgiumc | − 0.23*** | 0.047 | [− 0.32, − 0.14] | Spainc | 0.08 | 0.038 | [− 0.06, 0.21] |
| Iranc | 0.18 | 0.097 | [− 0.02, 0.37] | Iranc | 0.14 | 0.036 | [− 0.05, 0.33] |
| Chinac | 0.07 | 0.089 | [− 0.00, 0.14] | ||||
| Finlandc | 0.24 | 0.092 | [0.17, 0.31] | ||||
| Thailandc | 0.01 | 0.052 | [− 0.16, 0.18] | ||||
| Taiwanc | − 0.07 | 0.070 | [− 0.25, 0.11] | ||||
| Belgiumc | − 0.04 | 0.066 | [− 0.14, 0.06] | ||||
| Norwayc | − 0.20** | 0.043 | [− 0.34, − 0.06] | ||||
| Canadac | 0.13 | 0.038 | [0.00, 0.26] | ||||
BAI Beck Anxiety Inventory, BDI Beck Depression Inventory, CDI Children's Depression Inventory, CES-D Centre for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale, Costello Costello and Comrey Anxiety and Depression scales, DASS Depression Anxiety and Stress Scale, PROMIS Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Information System, PSS The Perceived Stress Scale, SCAS Spence Children’s Anxiety Scale, SCARED Screen for Child Anxiety Related Emotional Disorders, SCL Symptom checklist, SIAS Social interaction Anxiety Scale, SMFQ The Short Mood and Feeling Questionnaire, STAI Spielberger State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, ZUNG Zung self-rating depression scale
*p < 0.05
**p < 0.01
***p < 0.001
aLow quality (reference group)
bSTAI (reference group)
cUSA (reference group)
dBDI (reference group)
Themes and sub-themes from a thematic analysis of self-compassion and how it relates to experiences of anxiety and depression (stage 1 consultations)
| Themes | Sub-themes |
|---|---|
| Self-compassion as the opposite of self-criticism | SC to reduce self-criticism and disengage from negative thoughts |
| SC means having to sacrifice your goals and achievements | |
| Stigma that SC means you are weak/lazy | |
| Hard to get into the SC mindset, particularly in stressful/high pressure moments where self-criticism is high | |
| Self-criticism means young people treat themselves less compassionately than they do others | |
| Young people’s understanding and awareness of self-compassion | Limited exposure to the concept of SC and need to raise awareness |
| Assumption it is the same as self-care | |
| Increased SC can help reduce anxiety and depression | |
| SC dependent on family background/relationships/culture | |
| Preferences for SC programmes | SC programs are needed and would be helpful |
| SC programs tailored to person’s preferred format and to specific groups (eg. Culture, LGBTIQ +) | |
| Researchers should be aware of how certain words/behaviours come across to young people |
SC self-compassion, LGBTIQ + Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans, Intersex and Queer plus
Themes and sub-themes from a thematic analysis of young people’s response to a summary of research findings (stage 2 consultations)
| Themes | Sub-themes |
|---|---|
| Research and expert opinions are relevant to lived experience of anxiety and depression | Focusing on reducing self-criticism as opposed to increasing self-kindness resonates with young people |
| Framing self-compassion in terms of courage and wisdom makes it more appealing | |
| Having research to back mental health programmes helps them stand out from the sea of “self-help” methods advertised online | |
| The novelty of SC means it might take time for it to garner real credibility among young people | Clarity is needed around the definition of key terms and the practical aspects of self-compassion programmes |
| Young people need to become more familiar with SC to be able to trust it and engage with it | |
| Knowing more about self-compassion increases likelihood of participating in a programme | |
| SC programs are appealing but initial engagement can be difficult | While information is relevant, it is unlikely to be consumed unless there has been previous engagement |
| Information needs to be dynamic, brief, tailored to individuals, and promoted on the right platforms |
SC self-compassion