“…Other studies (Finkelstein-Fox, Park, & Riley, 2018;Gallego, Aguilar-Parra, Cangas, Rosado, & Langer, 2016;Meier & Welch, 2016;Running & Hildreth, 2017;Saoji, Mohanty, & Vinchurkar, 2017) Despite a number of studies supporting the effectiveness of these interventions in lowering the level of stress, (Gallego et al, 2016;Nanthakumar, 2018;Stillwell, Vermeesch, & Scott, 2017;Upchurch, Gill, Jiang, Prelip, & Slusser, 2018;Wang & Hagins, 2016), improving well-being (Birtwell, Williams, van Marwijk, Armitage, & Sheffield, 2019;Sarkissian, 2014;Soares & Chan, 2016;Zhang et al, 2018), and academic attainment in student populations (Bennett & Dorjee, 2016), they may also present adverse effects and contraindications. Notwithstanding the scarcity of empirical investigation on this subject, it is reported that mindfulness and meditation may induce temporary neurotic/anxiety symptoms (Dobkin, Irving, & Amar, 2012); mindful meditation, in particular, may induce psychosis, mania, or suicidal ideation especially in those with prior psychiatric morbidity (Wielgosz, Goldberg, Kral, Dunne, & Davidson, 2019); the autogenous training is contraindicated for those who suffer from a number of medical and/or mental conditions, for example, hypertension and psychosis (Brancaleone, 2010); yoga may not be recommended for those who suffer from arthritis (Dobkin et al, 2012); guided imagery may trigger post-traumatic stress symptom in patients with a history of previous emotional, sexual, or physical abuse (American Academy of Pediatrics, 2016); and qigong is contraindicated for those who have suffered from mental illness or severe consumptive disease, cerebrovascular disease, and severe cardiovascular, liver, kidney, gastrointestinal and hematological diseases, and musculoskeletal system diseases (Guo et al, 2018).…”