Mindfulness meditation use in Britain during the COVID-19 pandemic
Otto Simonsson, Stephen D. Fisher
PLoS ONE May 13, 2024 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0303349 via OpenAlex
Summary
AI-generated from the abstractIn 2021, 16 percent of adults in Britain had learned to practice mindfulness. Among those who practiced during the COVID-19 pandemic, 60 percent reported positive mental health effects, while 24 percent reported negative effects. Negative effects were more common among respondents with children under 18 (41 percent) compared to those without minors (13 percent). Mindfulness practice was more common among young and middle-aged adults, London residents, and Liberal Democrat voters. The findings indicate that mindfulness use is widespread but concentrated in certain groups, and that negative mental health effects affect a notable minority, warranting further research.
Study at a glance
| Characteristics | Cross-sectional study Peer reviewed |
|---|---|
| Population | Adult population in Britain |
| Intervention | Mindfulness meditation |
| Topics | Meditation |
| Keywords | Pandemic Logistic regression Clinical psychology |
| Citations | 2 |
| Key finding | 16 percent of British adults had learned mindfulness by 2021; among users during the pandemic, 60 percent reported positive and 24 percent reported negative mental health effects, with negative effects more common among those with children under 18. |
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The objectives of this study were to examine the prevalence and associations of mindfulness meditation use and also its perceived mental health effects during the COVID-19 pandemic. METHODS: Using repeated cross-sectional data from broad online samples weighted to be representative of the adult population in Britain, we estimated the prevalence of mindfulness meditation use and employed logistic regression models to investigate sociodemographic and political associations of mindfulness meditation use and also its perceived mental health effects during the COVID-19 pandemic. RESULTS: The findings suggest that 16 percent of adults in Britain had learnt to practice mindfulness in 2021. In covariate-adjusted regression models, having learnt to practice mindfulness was more common among young and middle-aged adults, residents in London, and respondents who voted for the Liberal Democrats. Among mindfulness meditation users who reported having practiced mindfulness during the COVID-19 pandemic, 60 percent reported that it positively affected their mental health and 24 percent reported that it negatively affected their mental health. Notably, 41 percent of respondents with children under 18 (versus 13 percent of those without minors) reported negative mental health effects. In covariate-adjusted regression models, negative mental health effects from mindfulness practice during the COVID-19 pandemic were not concentrated in any particular groups, except for respondents with children under 18. CONCLUSIONS: Mindfulness meditation has become widespread in Britain, but the results in this study suggest that mindfulness meditation use may be concentrated in certain sociodemographic and political groups. The results also suggest that practicing mindfulness during the COVID-19 pandemic had positive mental health effects for a majority of users, but approximately one-quarter of users reported negative mental health effects. It is therefore important for future research to continue monitoring the prevalence of mindfulness meditation use in society and to investigate under what circumstances, for whom, and in what ways mindfulness-based practices may have negative effects on mental health.