Abstract

Mindfulness-based interventions are increasingly being used as methods to promote psychological well-being of clinical and non-clinical adult populations. Much less is known, however, on the feasibility of these forms of mental training on healthy primary school students. Here, we tested the effects of a mindfulness-meditation training on a group of 16 healthy children within 7–8 years of age from an Italian primary school. An active control condition focused on emotion awareness was employed on a group of 15 age-matched healthy children from the same school. Both programs were delivered by the same instructors three times per week, for 8 total weeks. The same main teacher of the two classes did not participate in the trainings but she completed questionnaires aimed at giving comprehensive pre-post training evaluations of behavior, social, emotion, and attention regulation skills in the children. A children’s self-report measure of mood and depressive symptoms was also used. From the teacher’s reports we found a specific positive effect of the mindfulness-meditation training in reducing attention problems and also positive effects of both trainings in reducing children’s internalizing problems. However, subjectively, no child in either group reported less depressive symptoms after the trainings. The findings were interpreted as suggestive of a positive effect of mindfulness-meditation on several children’s psychological well-being dimensions and were also discussed in light of the discrepancy between teacher and children’s reports. More generally, the results were held to speak in favor of the effectiveness of mindfulness-based interventions for healthy primary school children.

Highlights

  • Mindfulness is an attribute of consciousness that can be defined as the ability of paying intentional attention to present moment experience with an open, curious and non-judgmental attitude (Brown and Ryan, 2003; Bishop et al, 2004)

  • For the Conners Teacher Rating Scale-Revised (CTRS-R) scale, the MANOVA included Group as betweensubject factor and, as dependent variables, it focused on the factors that most directly map onto the Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and oppositional spectrum of behaviors in the DSM-IV

  • T-scores for both groups of children are shown in Table 2 for each problem scale and subscale of the CBCL-TRF

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Summary

Introduction

Mindfulness is an attribute of consciousness that can be defined as the ability of paying intentional attention to present moment experience with an open, curious and non-judgmental attitude (Brown and Ryan, 2003; Bishop et al, 2004). A core assumption of mindfulness is that people generally live with an “automatic propensity” that often makes them unaware of their behavioral patterns and of their continuous past- and future-related thoughts and ruminations This condition of “mindlessness” may contribute to health and psychological problems (e.g., anxiety, depression, Mindfulness-Meditation in Young Children emotion dysregulation, and negative mood) (Kabat-Zinn, 1990; Brown and Ryan, 2003; Didonna, 2009; Hölzel et al, 2011). Mindful awareness, which can be effectively developed through meditation practice, allows individuals to stay in the here and and to experience present-moment reality with an open and accepting attitude This can result in more flexible, adaptive behavior with consequent beneficial health effects at both physical and mental levels (Kabat-Zinn, 1994; Davidson et al, 2003; Didonna, 2009). The “observe and accept” approach of mindfulness-meditation has been documented to result in better executive functioning and attention regulation abilities (Jha et al, 2007; Malinowski, 2013)

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