# The Impact of Yoga on Athletes' Mental Well-Being: An Experimental Study

**Authors:** Priyanka Saraswati, Satish Kanaujia, Bhuwan Chandra Kapri

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.66044 · Cureus · 2024-08-02

## TL;DR

This study shows that practicing yoga can improve sleep quality, reduce stress and anxiety, and enhance mental well-being in athletes.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates that a six-week yoga intervention significantly improves psychological outcomes in recreational athletes.

## Key findings

- Yoga practice significantly reduced stress, anxiety, and improved sleep quality in athletes.
- Mindfulness and psychological flexibility improved after the yoga intervention.
- Stress reduction and anxiety relief were the strongest predictors of improved psychological flexibility.

## Abstract

Background

Athletes have a variety of obstacles that might shrink their chances of getting adequate rest, including competing and training times, travel, stress, academic responsibilities, and overtraining. Furthermore, athletes have been reported to have poor self-reports of their sleep length and quality. The study aims to assess the impact of yoga practice on sleep quality, stress, anxiety, psychological rigidity, and experience avoidance.

Methods

A pre- and post-test randomized design was applied for the research. Forty-four recreational athletes (age 18-45 years) were selected per the inclusion criteria from the athletes studying at Banaras Hindu University. Exclusion criteria are a likely severe psychiatric disorder, chronic illness, substance abuse, disability, endocrine or metabolic disorders, and history of using psychotropic drugs and smoking. The Yogic intervention contains the Pranayama and meditation, which was practiced for six weeks in the intervention group. Outcome variables were stress, sleep, anxiety, mindfulness, psychological rigidity, and experience avoidance. The Perceived Stress Scale (PSS), Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), Sport Competition Anxiety Test, Mindful Attention Awareness Scale (MAAS), and Acceptance and Action Questionnaire-II (AAQ-II) were applied to measure the outcomes.

Results

The majority of the participants (30 (68%)) were male, and 44 (100%) had more than two years of sports experience. Of the participants, 18 (40.90%) had a habit of 3-5 hours of internet surfing. We noticed that there was a significant mean difference from pre- to post-intervention in terms of stress, sleep, anxiety, mindfulness, psychological rigidity, and experience avoidance (p < 0.0001).

Conclusion

The results concluded positive effects of yoga on athletes' stress, sleep, anxiety, mindfulness, psychological rigidity, and experience avoidance in athletes. Stress alleviation and reduced anxiety are the strongest predictors of improving psychological flexibility skills in athletes' daily lives. Improving mindfulness and supporting good sleep patterns could be good indicators of improving psychological rigidity and experience avoidance.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Well (MESH:C536693), substance abuse (MESH:D019966), Anxiety (MESH:D001007), chronic illness (MESH:D002908), psychiatric disorder (MESH:D001523), endocrine or metabolic disorders (MESH:D004700), psychological rigidity (MESH:D000067073)

## Full text

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## References

22 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11366782/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11366782