Evaluating Be Mindful
The effectiveness of Be Mindful, a digital program of Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) was the subject of a highly significant research study by the Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford and published in BMJ Open in 2013.
Adele Krusche, Eva Cyhlarova, and Mark Williams aimed to understand if a digital program could be just as effective as mindfulness courses delivered face-to-face, through investigating the feasibility and effectiveness of Be Mindful for perceived stress, anxiety and depression.
This investigation followed a previous preliminary evaluation of Be Mindful's impact on stress, published in BMJ Open in 2012, also by the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Oxford. The preliminary evaluation study reported very promising results, with an average reduction of 40% in stress for the 100 participants evaluated, leading to this secondary evaluation study introducing two more assessments to also measure Be Mindful's impact on anxiety and depression, and draw comparisons with face-to-face mindfulness interventions.
Be Mindful administers clinically recognised assessments at the start and end of the structured program, as well as at a one-month follow up, to successfully measure the effectiveness of the program. The use of clinical measurements widely used in UK primary care settings and the IAPT initiative, makes for an easy comparison with face-to-face mindfulness interventions and other therapies.
The reported mental health outcomes of the 273 participants evaluated in the study (those who completed the assessments at the start, end and at a one-month follow-up), were highly significant and comparable to mindfulness therapies delivered face-to-face, as well as other interventions, including cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT). The participants, on average, enjoyed reductions of 58% in anxiety, 40% in stress and 57% in depression.
58%
REDUCTION IN ANXIETY
57%
DEPRESSION REDUCTION
40%
STRESS REDUCTION
Prior to this study there hadn't been any research examining changes in depression and anxiety in a non-clinical sample using an digital mindfulness program based directly on Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) and Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) courses. The three assessments administered through Be Mindful - the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS-10), Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9), Generalised Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7) - had all been used in previous research and shown to have good reliability and validity, but GAD-7 and PHQ-9 had never been used to evaluate an digital on-demand program.
Though the study was limited due to no control group for comparison, the results were identified as highly significant and it could not be denied that those who chose this method of mindfulness delivery found it helpful, with a reduction of stress, anxiety and depression at the end of the program and then a further reduction one-month later at follow-up, which also suggested continued use of skills learnt.
It was concluded that delivering MBCT digitally with Be Mindful was an acceptable mode of delivering MBCT and appeared to decrease stress, anxiety and depression, comparable to MBCT courses delivered in person.
Reference: Krusche, Adele, Eva Cyhlarova, and J. Mark G. Williams. "Mindfulness online: an evaluation of the feasibility of a web-based mindfulness course for stress, anxiety and depression." BMJ open 3.11 (2013): e003498
http://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/3/11/e003498.full
Reference: Krusche, A., Cyhlarova, E., King, S., & Williams, J. M. G. (2012). Mindfulness online: a preliminary evaluation of the feasibility of a web-based mindfulness course and the impact on stress. BMJ open, 2(3), e000803
http://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/2/3/e000803.full.html
We welcome research enquiries
We want our digital programs to continue to be the subject of ground-breaking research studies that further knowledge in the field of digital therapeutics for better mental health and chronic pain management.