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Título
Effectiveness of Mindfulness and Positive Strengthening mHealth Interventions for the Promotion of Subjective Emotional Wellbeing and Management of Self-Efficacy for Chronic Cardiac Diseases
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Cardiovascular disease
Intervention
Positive and negative wellbeing
Mindfulness
Positive strengthening
Cardiovascular management self-efficacy
Clasificación UNESCO
6114 Psicología social
Fecha de publicación
2022
Editor
MDPI
Citación
Tabernero, C., Gutiérrez-Domingo, T., Steca, P., Castillo-Mayén, R., Cuadrado, E., Rubio, S. J., Farhane-Medina, N. Z., Luque, B., Tabernero, C., Gutiérrez-Domingo, T., Steca, P., Castillo-Mayén, R., Cuadrado, E., Rubio, S. J., Farhane-Medina, N. Z., & Luque, B. (2022). Effectiveness of Mindfulness and Positive Strengthening mHealth Interventions for the Promotion of Subjective Emotional Wellbeing and Management of Self-Efficacy for Chronic Cardiac Diseases. Journal of Personalized Medicine, 12(12), Article 12. https://doi.org/10.3390/JPM12121953
Resumen
[EN]Intervention in health prevention and treatment via mobile phones is becoming a key
element on health promotion. Testing the efficacy of these mobile health (mHealth) psychological
interventions for cardiovascular health is necessary as it is a chronic pathology, and it can influence
the affective and cognitive states of patients. This research aimed to analyze the effectiveness
of two brief psychological interventions—mindfulness and positive strengthening—to promote
subjective emotional wellbeing and disease management self-efficacy using mHealth. This was a
three-arm intervention and feasibility study, with a pre-post design and three follow-up measures
with 105 patients (93 completed all phases) with cardiovascular diseases. Group 1 and 2 received the
mindfulness or strengthening intervention, and Group 3 was the control group. The positive–negative
affect and management self-efficacy for chronic and cardiovascular diseases were analyzed over time,
while anxiety and depression levels were assessed at the beginning of the study. The results showed
that mindfulness and positive strengthening interventions both had a positive effect on participants’
affective state and management self-efficacy for the disease in comparison with the control group over
time, even after controlling for baseline anxiety and depression levels. Positive strengthening seems
to be more effective for improving cardiac self-efficacy, while mindfulness practice was significantly
more effective at reducing negative affect at the first face-to-face evaluation.
URI
DOI
10.3390/JPM12121953
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