Examining the Relationship between Mindfulness, Perceived Stress, and Blood Pressure in African-American College Students.

Ronda Wright, Kristina Roberson, Elijah O Onsomu, Yolanda Johnson, Cathy Dearman, Loneke T Blackman Carr, Amanda Alise Price, Vanessa Duren-Winfield
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Abstract

College students are prone to stress, making them vulnerable to cardiovascular disease (CVD). Harmful health behaviors, such as tobacco or alcohol use, further predispose students to hypertension (HTN). African-Americans (AA) experience increased blood pressure reactivity, and weathering, due to race-related stressors. This interplay makes AA college students good targets for strategies to prevent stress and HTN disease risk. This project examined the relationship between mindfulness, perceived stress and blood pressure among a group of AA college students enrolled in an HBCU healthy heart course. Participants' systolic and diastolic blood pressure averaged 122 mmHg and 76 mmHg, respectively. The Spearman correlation revealed a negative strong relationship between mindfulness and perceived stress (rs = -0.61, p = 0.004). The coefficient of determination indicated that 37% of the variance in mindfulness was explained by perceived stress. College health practitioners should consider integrating mindfulness into course activities and expanding its treatment modality.

Abstract Image

非裔美国大学生正念、压力感知和血压关系的研究。
大学生容易受到压力,这使他们容易患心血管疾病。有害的健康行为,如吸烟或饮酒,进一步使学生易患高血压(HTN)。非裔美国人(AA)由于与种族有关的压力因素,血压反应性和耐候性增加。这种相互作用使AA大学生成为预防压力和HTN疾病风险策略的良好目标。本项目研究了一组参加HBCU健康心脏课程的AA大学生的正念、感知压力和血压之间的关系。参与者的收缩压和舒张压平均分别为122 mmHg和76 mmHg。Spearman相关显示正念与感知压力之间呈强负相关(rs = -0.61, p = 0.004)。决定系数表明,37%的正念差异可以用感知压力来解释。高校卫生从业人员应考虑将正念融入课程活动,并扩大其治疗方式。
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