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Well-being and Distress in University Students with ADHD Traits: the Mediating Roles of Self-Compassion and Emotion Regulation Difficulties

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Abstract

Objectives

Tertiary education is particularly demanding for students with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), who often struggle with emotion regulation and are at greater risk of internalising disorders compared to their peers. Self-compassion is a skill associated with positive mental health and adaptive emotion regulation that might support students in managing the emotional challenges of studying with ADHD. We examined the relationship between ADHD traits and self-compassion in university students, as well as the mediating role of self-compassion and emotion regulation difficulties in mental health outcomes.

Method

A sample of 232 university students aged 18 to 47 (M = 19.92, SD = 3.75) years completed an online survey measuring ADHD traits, self-compassion, emotion regulation difficulties, distress, and well-being.

Results

Correlational analyses showed that higher ADHD traits were associated with higher self-criticism, isolation, and overidentification (i.e. uncompassionate self-responding; USR), but not with self-compassionate responding (i.e. self-kindness, common humanity, or mindfulness). Mediation analyses showed that USR partially mediated the relationship ADHD traits have with distress and fully mediated the relationship with well-being. Serial mediation analyses indicated that this occurred via emotion regulation.

Conclusions

The results help explain why university students with ADHD traits experience greater mental health difficulties than their peers and support the addition of self-compassion training in interventions that aim to support them.

Preregistration

This study is not preregistered.

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Data Availability

Supporting data are not available as participants of this study were not asked to consent for their data to be shared publicly.

References

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Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Contributions

GF designed and executed the study, performed the analyses, and wrote the paper. JO collaborated with the study design, methodology, and writing of the paper. AFJ collaborated in the study design, methodology, and writing of the paper. DB collaborated in the study design, methodology, data analyses, and writing of the paper. All authors approved the final version of the manuscript for submission.

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Glenda M. Farmer.

Ethics declarations

Ethics Approval

This study received ethics approval from the University of Western Australia (RA/4/20/5559) and was performed according to the National Statement on Ethical Conduct in Research (2018).

Informed Consent

All participants provided informed consent to participate in the study.

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare no competing interests.

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Farmer, G.M., Ohan, J.L., Finlay-Jones, A.L. et al. Well-being and Distress in University Students with ADHD Traits: the Mediating Roles of Self-Compassion and Emotion Regulation Difficulties. Mindfulness 14, 448–459 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12671-022-02051-x

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12671-022-02051-x

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