Anxiety Clinical Trial
Official title:
Kindness as an Intervention for Student Social Interaction Anxiety, Resilience, Affect, and Mood
The objective of this study is to assess the impact of engaging in deliberate acts of kindness on resilience (primary outcome); social interaction anxiety and affect (secondary outcomes); and mood (exploratory outcome) of undergraduate and graduate students at Western University (UWO). Recruitment of 200 participants consisting of 150 full-time undergraduate and 50 graduate students, randomized to either the intervention (n=100) or control group (n=100) will be achieved via a mass email to all full-time students at UWO. Both intervention and control groups will receive an email with access to a relaxation and stress management booklet from UWO's Wellness Education Centre (http://studentexperience.uwo.ca/docs/RelaxationAndStressManagement.pdf). In addition, the intervention group will be asked to (1) complete and log/submit a minimum of three deliberate acts of kindness per day for one month, and (2) join the study-dedicated online site to connect with, support, and share experiences and ideas with each other around acts of kindness. Individuals in the intervention group will also receive a list of deliberate acts of kindness ideas, for reference. Baseline, immediate post intervention, and three-months post intervention data will be collected using previously validated questionnaires associated with each outcome of interest, and posted to Qualtrics, an online survey tool. Additionally, immediately following the intervention and 3 months post intervention all participants will complete an open-ended question asking them to describe their overall experience being involved in the study. Quantitative and qualitative data analysis will occur upon the completion of the study.
Poor mental health is a significant public health concern that disproportionally affects
university students, compared to their community counterparts, and stress is a main culprit.
Although privileged in terms of attending higher education, the stress-related inequity
experienced among university students stems from "academic load, constant pressure to
succeed, competition with peers, financial burdens, and peer, teacher or parental pressure".
These stressors can trigger or exacerbate anxiety levels, which are on the rise among
students. The most recent National College Health Assessment Survey, which included Canadian
postsecondary institutions, showed a marked increase in student anxiety between 2013 to 2016.
Although less studied than undergraduates, graduate students' mental health also is worrisome
with over 60% feeling exhausted, overwhelmed, hopeless, and/or depressed nearly all of the
time. It is imperative that evidence-informed approaches to enhance resilience and reduce the
negative mental health experiences of undergraduate and graduate students be implemented and
evaluated. Although improving resilience and overall mental health is a growing focus across
campuses, current programming is clearly unable to address the concern in its entirety, and
additional interventions are required.
An emerging and promising approach to promoting positive mental health and resilience among
secondary students is performing acts of kindness. Arguably, performing acts of kindness
improves mental health through the strengthening of psychological resilience. Resilience, as
an outcome, is predicated on six underlying dimensions: health, collaboration, purpose,
composure, reasoning, and tenacity. In terms of health and collaboration, a small
classroom-based kindness pilot entailing logging acts of kindness by undergraduate students
at Western University (UWO), found improvements in individual levels of wellbeing (i.e.
confidence and decreased stress), perceptions of positive classroom culture, and classroom
cohesion. Performing acts of kindness is correlated with happiness which results in a
positive sense of purpose, increased composure, and improved reasoning and resilience.
Moreover, the physiological effects are well-known as functional magnetic resonance images
(fMRIs) show activation in the reward centres of the brain when subjects are engaged in acts
of kindness. Despite the strong theoretical foundation that links acts of kindness with
resilience, this area of research has yet to be sufficiently explored. To that end, the
objective of this study is to assess the impact of engaging in deliberate acts of kindness on
resilience (primary outcome); social interaction anxiety and affect (secondary outcomes); and
mood (exploratory outcome) of undergraduate and graduate students at UWO.
Methods
Study Design
A longitudinal repeated-measures, mixed methods randomized control trial grounded in an
interpretive description paradigm will be used. Interpretive description is an inductive
analysis approach that creates ways of understanding phenomena yielding application-based
implications for practice. Recruitment of 200 participants consisting of 150 full-time
undergraduate and 50 graduate students, randomized to either the intervention (n=100) or
control group (n=100) will be achieved via a mass email to all full-time students at UWO once
ethical approval is obtained and the trial is registered. This sample size was selected
considering two criteria: 1) based on our previous work in the area the sample size is
feasible; and 2) from a power analysis using resilience as the primary outcome, a sample of
100 per group is sufficient to detect significant differences between groups (p < 0.05).
Participants will be eligible if they are: (a) full-time undergraduate or graduate students
at UWO and/or the affiliate schools (Kings, Brescia, Huron) and (b) English-speaking. Both
intervention and control group participants will receive an email with access to a relaxation
and stress management booklet from UWO's Wellness Education Centre. In addition, the
intervention group will be asked to (1) complete and log/submit a minimum of three deliberate
acts of kindness per day for one month, and (2) join the study-dedicated online site to
connect with, support, and share experiences and ideas with each other around acts of
kindness. Deliberate acts of kindness will be defined for participants as purposeful acts
benefitting others that the others would presumably like.
Data Collection/Metrics
Baseline, immediate post intervention, and three-months post intervention data will be
collected using Qualtrics, an online survey tool. Baseline will consist of basic demographic
information, and four previously validated scales: (1) Brief Resilience Scale (BRS); (2)
Social Interaction Anxiety Scale-Straightforward (SIAS-S); (3) International Positive and
Negative Affect Schedule-Short Form (I-PANAS-SF); and (4) Brief Mood Introspection Scale
(BMIS). The assessments will take 15-minutes to complete. After the completion of the
baseline assessment participants will be randomized using stratification by degree level
(i.e., undergraduate or graduate). Immediately following the intervention and 3 months post
intervention all participants will complete the same assessments administered at baseline
(minus demographics) with the addition of an open-ended question asking participants to
describe their overall experience being involved in the study.
Data analysis
Data analysis will occur upon the completion of the study and quantitative data analysis will
initially involve computing measures of central tendency and dispersion as well as the
computation of the validated scales. Next, general linear models will be used to examine both
differences between groups and overtime. For the qualitative data, inductive content analysis
using interpretive description will be conducted independently, and simultaneously by two
researchers who will subsequently meet, upon the completion of analysis, to determine
agreement in emerging findings. Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) will be used
for quantitative analysis and QSR International NVivo software will be used to code and
categorize qualitative data. Knowledge Translation will involve both traditional mechanisms
(publications/conferences) and engagement with social media (infographics, youtube videos).
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