The Effect of Self-Compassion Practices on Nomophobia Symptoms in Young Adults
NCT ID: NCT07069283
Last Updated: 2025-07-16
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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NOT_YET_RECRUITING
NA
120 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2025-08-25
2026-03-25
Brief Summary
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In addition to making life easier, nomophobia, which occurs with excessive and uncontrolled use of smartphones, can cause some problems. Increasing individuality and the resulting weakening of face-to-face communication bring about addictive applications, depression, headache, visual impairments, sleep problems, musculoskeletal problems, and physiological and psychological problems.
To cope with and manage the symptoms of an addictive condition such as nomophobia, it is envisaged that young adults should be supported with self-compassion practices.
Self-compassion exists from the essence of awareness when we encounter painful and distressing situations. Self-compassion tells individuals to be kind to themselves when they encounter pain and distress. When people encounter an adverse life event, they blame themselves, criticize themselves, react to themselves, and make harmful decisions. A happy and peaceful life emerges thanks to self-compassion, a sense of security, and health. If individuals can accept and tolerate many positive and negative life events and be kind and tolerant towards themselves, they can stop limiting and ignoring their feelings and thoughts. In this way, they can avoid over-identifying by realizing that the experiences experienced are experiences that many people can experience. Individuals with high levels of self-compassion have low levels of depression, anxiety, stress, perfectionism, rumination, and suppressing thoughts. In addition, since they do not judge themselves, their happiness, optimism, enjoyment of life, and motivation are high. In line with this information, self-compassion practices can be supportive during this period when young adults encounter a problem such as nomophobia and have to manage many physiological symptoms. This study aimed to determine the effect of self-compassion practices on nomophobia symptoms in young adults.
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Detailed Description
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Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
CROSSOVER
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
NONE
Study Groups
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Experimantal group
This group will be given an online self-compassion program for 8 weeks..
Self-Compassion Program
Program includes four basic practices: breathing meditation, walking meditation, body scan, and mindful movement. Consciously focusing on what is happening allows people to observe and accept what they are experiencing in their bodies, minds, and the world around them at that moment. Mindfulness practices are an 8-week practice consisting of 2-2.5 hour sessions per week by a trained instructor, mindfulness meditation practices, yoga practices, examining the psychological and physiological aspects of stress, and recently including the concept of self-compassion. In addition, daily practices are given to participants, and a suitable day is determined as a retreat day. The aim is to enable individuals to reveal and experience their thoughts, emotions, and bodily sensations and to increase emotional tolerance by revealing avoidance behaviors. Individuals learn to return to and accept intense bodily sensations and emotional discomfort with mindfulness.
Control Group
There will be no intervention
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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Self-Compassion Program
Program includes four basic practices: breathing meditation, walking meditation, body scan, and mindful movement. Consciously focusing on what is happening allows people to observe and accept what they are experiencing in their bodies, minds, and the world around them at that moment. Mindfulness practices are an 8-week practice consisting of 2-2.5 hour sessions per week by a trained instructor, mindfulness meditation practices, yoga practices, examining the psychological and physiological aspects of stress, and recently including the concept of self-compassion. In addition, daily practices are given to participants, and a suitable day is determined as a retreat day. The aim is to enable individuals to reveal and experience their thoughts, emotions, and bodily sensations and to increase emotional tolerance by revealing avoidance behaviors. Individuals learn to return to and accept intense bodily sensations and emotional discomfort with mindfulness.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Being between the ages of 18-30
* Not having any psychiatric problems
Exclusion Criteria
18 Years
30 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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University of Beykent
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Behice Belkıs ÇALIŞKAN
phd
Locations
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Beykent ün
Istanbul, , Turkey (Türkiye)
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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E-45778635-050.99-182837
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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