Improving stress mindset through education and imagery.

Anxiety Stress Coping

Baylor Psychology and Neuroscience Department, Baylor University, Waco, TX, USA.

Published: July 2024

Background: Research suggests interventions such as education and imagery can elicit a greater stress-is-enhancing mindset. The present study examined the individual and combined effect of stress-is-enhancing education and/or imagery delivered virtually in altering stress mindset. Three 3-minute online video interventions: (1) education, (2) imagery, (3) education with imagery were compared to each other and a control comparison.

Design And Methods: Participants ( = 164; 103 = female;  = 20.03, 1.39 years) completed the Stress Mindset Measure (SMM) before being randomly assigned to a group to watch a three-minute video and completing the SMM again.

Results: The 2-time × 4-group ANOVA showed a significant time effect, (1, 158) = 50.45,  < .001,  = .242, no group effect, (3, 158) = 0.89,  = .449,  = .017, and a significant time × group interaction, (3, 158) = 4.48,  = .005, = .078. All three experimental groups reported greater stress-is-enhancing mindset post-intervention compared to pre-intervention. At post-intervention the education with imagery group had a significantly more stress-is-enhancing mindset compared to the control group.

Conclusions: Results suggest that online stress mindset videos may be effective with a combined stress education and imagery intervention being most effective.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10615806.2023.2279663DOI Listing

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