Moliver N, Mika Em, Chartrand Ms, Haussmann Re, Khalsa Sbs
School of Behavioral and Health Sciences, Northcentral University, Arizona, USA.
Int J Yoga. 2013 Jan;6(1):11-9. doi: 10.4103/0973-6131.105937.
Although high levels of subjective well-being (SWB) are common in old age, a subset of older individuals is disproportionately vulnerable to negative affect. Yoga has been shown to have many short-term benefits, but researchers have not determined whether a long-term or frequent yoga practice increasingly protects older women from low levels of psychological well-being.
The purpose of this study was to examine the extent to which psychological attitudes, transcendence, mental mastery, and subjective vitality in a sample of female yoga practitioners over 45 years varied according to the length and frequency of yoga practice.
We administered online surveys to a non-probability sample of 211 female yoga practitioners 45 to 80. We used weighted least squares regression analyses to evaluate the relationship of extent of yoga experience to the outcome variables after accounting for age and lifestyle factors.
Participants had practiced yoga for as long as 50 years and for up to 28 h per week. There were significant positive relationships between yoga experience and all outcome variables. These significant relationships remained after accounting for age and lifestyle factors. When we computed yoga experience in terms of total calendar years, without accounting for hours of practice, significant relationships did not remain. Transcendence of the ordinary was the most strongly associated with current yoga practice frequency, and positive psychological attitudes were the most strongly associated with total lifetime hours of practice.
Among a non-probability sample of female yoga practitioners between 45 and 80 years, increased yoga experience predicted increased levels of psychological well-being. Results showed a dose-response effect, with yoga experience exercising an increasingly protective effect against low levels of SWB and vitality.
尽管主观幸福感(SWB)水平较高在老年人群中很常见,但仍有一部分老年人特别容易受到负面影响。瑜伽已被证明有许多短期益处,但研究人员尚未确定长期或频繁练习瑜伽是否能增强老年女性抵御低心理健康水平的能力。
本研究旨在探讨45岁以上女性瑜伽练习者样本中的心理态度、超越感、心理掌控力和主观活力在多大程度上会因瑜伽练习的时长和频率而有所不同。
我们对211名年龄在45至80岁之间的女性瑜伽练习者进行了非概率抽样在线调查。在考虑年龄和生活方式因素后,我们使用加权最小二乘法回归分析来评估瑜伽经验程度与结果变量之间的关系。
参与者练习瑜伽的时间长达50年,每周练习时间长达28小时。瑜伽经验与所有结果变量之间均存在显著的正相关关系。在考虑年龄和生活方式因素后,这些显著关系依然存在。当我们按总日历年来计算瑜伽经验,而不考虑练习时长时,显著关系不再存在。超越平凡与当前瑜伽练习频率的关联最为紧密,积极的心理态度与一生总练习时长的关联最为紧密。
在45至80岁的女性瑜伽练习者非概率样本中,瑜伽经验的增加预示着心理健康水平的提高。结果显示出剂量反应效应,即瑜伽经验对低水平的主观幸福感和活力具有越来越强的保护作用。