Skip to content

Nupur Nag

Neuroepidemiology Unit, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia. Electronic address: nnag@unimelb.edu.au.

2 papers in the library · 12 citations · publishing 2022

Papers

Mining the Gems of a Web-Based Mindfulness Intervention: Qualitative Analysis of Factors Aiding Completion and Implementation.

JMIR formative research October 5, 2022 Muskan Yadav, Sandra Neate, Craig Hassed et al. 8 citations

Participants in an online mindfulness course who completed at least 90% of the program reported that a virtual community, appealing content, enablers like free access and variety, and noticeable benefits to physical and mental well-being helped them finish the course and apply its teachings. Novel findings included growing together as a group, repeating the course, evidence-based teaching, and immediate well-being improvements. These elements may guide the design of future digital health interventions to support positive behavior change.

A qualitative analysis of free text comments of participants from a massive open online mindfulness course.

Frontiers in public health January 1, 2022 Sandra L Neate, Jeanette C Reece, Craig Hassed et al. 4 citations

Participants in a 4-week online mindfulness course described developing mindfulness through paying attention to the present moment, letting go, acceptance, gentleness, and a sense of belonging. They reported translating mindfulness into daily life as a support to mental wellbeing, dealing with uncertainty and adversity, living more consciously, connecting with self and others, and channeling attention into productivity. These insights from 527 respondents (16% of 3,335 course completers) suggest how online mindfulness programs can be designed to foster beneficial outcomes.