MindfulnessResearch, explained

Does Practicing Mindfulness Really Help Young People?

Jillian SchaferReviewed by Jillian Schafer··4 min read
Mindfulness-based interventions with youth: A comprehensive meta-analysis of group-design studies
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The short version

A meta-analysis of 76 studies and over 6,000 young people found that mindfulness-based interventions produce a small but positive improvement in mental wellness. The benefit is real but modest, not a cure-all, making mindfulness a reasonable, low-risk tool to try alongside sleep, connection, and support.

Being young today can be a lot: stress, overwhelm, and anxiety that can feel like they come from every direction. Mindfulness is often held up as an answer, but does teaching young people to be more mindful actually make a difference? Researchers pulled together a large body of evidence to give the question a careful, numbers-based answer.

What the researchers wanted to know

Mindfulness-based interventions, or MBIs, are structured programs that teach present-moment awareness and a nonjudgmental, accepting way of relating to your own thoughts and feelings. They have become popular for children and teens, but the researchers wanted to move beyond enthusiasm to evidence. The central question was whether MBIs genuinely benefit young people's mental wellness, and if so, how large that benefit tends to be. Getting a realistic sense of the size of the effect matters, because there is a big difference between a life-changing intervention and a small, if worthwhile, nudge.

How they studied it

The researchers conducted a comprehensive meta-analysis of group-design studies. Breaking that down, group-design studies are ones that compare groups of participants, often those who received a mindfulness program versus those who did not, which helps show whether the program itself made a difference. A meta-analysis then statistically combines the results from many such studies into one overall estimate. According to the summary, the analysis drew on 76 studies involving more than 6,000 participants. That is a large and diverse pool, which is exactly what you want when trying to reach a conclusion that holds up broadly rather than reflecting the quirks of any single study.

What they found

The pooled result was a small but positive effect. Across the many studies, mindfulness-based interventions were associated with modest improvements in young people's mental wellness.

A small but positive effect is easy to misread: it does not mean the programs do nothing, but that the typical benefit is real and modest rather than dramatic.

It is worth dwelling on what small but positive means, because it is easy to misread in either direction. It does not mean the programs are useless. It means that, averaged across thousands of young people and dozens of studies, the typical benefit is real but modest rather than dramatic. That is actually a common and honest result for psychological interventions, and a small effect spread across many young people can still add up to something meaningful at a population level, even if any one individual might not feel a night-and-day change.

What this means for you

If you are a young person, or a parent or educator supporting one, the practical message is measured optimism. Mindfulness appears to help, on average, which makes it a reasonable, low-risk tool to try, but it is wisest to approach it with realistic expectations rather than treating it as a cure-all. Thinking of it as one helpful ingredient among many, alongside sleep, connection, movement, and support, fits the evidence better than pinning all your hopes on it.

For young people themselves, the underlying practices are simple and accessible: pausing to notice your breath, observing anxious thoughts without immediately believing them, and gently returning your attention to the present. These are skills that build with practice, and starting young may help them become second nature. If a mindfulness program is offered at school or elsewhere, this research suggests it is a reasonable thing to give a genuine try.

The honest caveats

Several limits are important. First, small effects come with real humility. A modest average benefit means many young people will experience only a subtle change, and mindfulness should not be oversold as a guaranteed fix for stress, anxiety, or overwhelm. Managing expectations is part of using the tool well.

Second, a meta-analysis of 76 studies necessarily blends together programs that vary in length, content, age group, and quality. The overall estimate is an average, so specific programs may work better or worse, and the pooled figure will not describe every individual or every setting. Combining studies gives a trustworthy big-picture view, but it smooths over important differences.

Because we are working from a summary rather than the full detailed data, we are describing the general finding rather than exact numbers, and a positive average across studies is encouraging evidence rather than a promise for any one person. Most importantly, none of this is medical advice. Mindfulness is not a substitute for professional care, and a young person struggling with serious anxiety, depression, or distress deserves support from a qualified professional. With all of that in mind, the honest takeaway is genuinely hopeful: teaching young people mindfulness appears to help their mental wellness, modestly but really, making it a sensible tool to offer as part of a fuller approach to caring for them.

Key takeaways
  • A meta-analysis of 76 studies with over 6,000 young participants found mindfulness programs had a small but positive effect on mental wellness.
  • Small but positive means a real, modest benefit, best treated as one helpful ingredient alongside sleep, connection, movement, and support.
  • Averages hide big differences between programs, and serious anxiety or distress in a young person still calls for professional care.

Frequently asked questions

How much do mindfulness programs actually help young people?

The meta-analysis found a small but positive effect on young people's mental wellness. Averaged across thousands of participants and dozens of studies, the typical benefit is real but modest rather than dramatic. That kind of small effect can still add up meaningfully at a population level, even if any single young person may not feel a night-and-day change.

How many studies and participants were included in this analysis?

According to the summary, the meta-analysis drew on 76 group-design studies involving more than 6,000 participants. Group-design studies compare people who received a mindfulness program with those who did not, and pooling many of them gives a broader conclusion than any single study. It is a large and diverse pool, which is what you want for a result that holds up broadly.

Should mindfulness be treated as a cure for youth stress and anxiety?

No. The article stresses measured optimism: mindfulness appears to help on average, making it a reasonable, low-risk tool, but it should not be oversold as a guaranteed fix. It fits the evidence better to treat it as one helpful ingredient alongside sleep, connection, movement, and support.

The original study

Mindfulness-based interventions with youth: A comprehensive meta-analysis of group-design studies

Read the full study

This is a plain-English summary reviewed by Jillian Schafer. It is educational, not medical advice.

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