Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
Summative Assessment of the BurntOut 3D Simulation With Medical Students
Verified date | December 2023 |
Source | Clinical Tools, Inc. |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Burnout is a common problem for medical students and is associated with stress-related health problems and also potentially affects the quality of care delivered to their patients. Among the health problems commonly associated with burnout are substance use problems, and alcohol is the substance most often misused. The purpose of the evaluation is to document whether an educational intervention incorporating aspects of virtual reality (VR) via a 3D online simulation experience prevents or improves the primary endpoint of burnout and the secondary endpoints of burnout-related factors in medical students. The investigators will also will evaluate student satisfaction with the intervention to determine if it meets our standard of success. The hypothesis is that the intervention will improve the primary clinical endpoint of burnout from pre-intervention to post-intervention as measured by the Maslach Burnout Inventory, a validated inventory that is widely used to measure burnout. The related factors that will be measured as secondary clinical endpoints include quality of life, substance use (alcohol and drugs), depression, and resilience. Due to evidence that these endpoints are linked to burnout, the investigators also hypothesize that the measures will improve pre- to post-intervention. Satisfaction of the target audience after completing the simulation intervention will also be evaluated. The evaluation will be prior to and after use of the simulation by medical student participants, using a pre-/post intervention, wait-list control, parallel design.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 73 |
Est. completion date | July 31, 2022 |
Est. primary completion date | July 1, 2022 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - US Medical students in years 2-4 - Has access to a computer with Internet access Exclusion Criteria: --Self report of active symptoms of major depression |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Clinical Tools, Inc. | Chapel Hill | North Carolina |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Clinical Tools, Inc. | National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Burnout Change | Burnout was measured using the Maslach Burnout Inventory (modified). This scale uses items to assess emotional exhaustion, and depersonalization, and measure the sense of personal accomplishment. Selected items were used to make it relevant to medical students experience. It was modified so that for all questions, higher scores indicate higher, and thus more problematic, levels of burnout.
A decrease means an improvement; lower values mean more improvement. A positive change means worsening; higher values mean more worsening. Range: Minimum total value 0, Maximum total value 96. The Outcome Measure is the amount of Burnout Change from baseline (evaluation point #1) to evaluation point #2. Burnout Change is calculated for the intervention group pre intervention and 2 weeks post intervention (case) and pre intervention and after a 2 week waiting period for the Wait Group (Control) . See Baseline for more details. |
1 months | |
Secondary | Alcohol Use Change | Alcohol use was measured using the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test - Concise, (AUDIT-C). This instrument is a screening tool to identify users who are hazardous drinkers or who have active alcohol use disorder.
Higher scores= greater frequency or amount of alcohol use or misuse Range: Minimum value: 0, Maximum value 12. High scores indicate worse outcomes. A score of over 4 for men, and over 3 for women is considered a positive screen for alcohol misuse. Higher scores suggest a higher likelihood that alcohol use is negatively impacting the person's health and safety. The Outcome Measure is the amount of Alcohol Use Change from baseline (evaluation point #1) to evaluation point #2. Alcohol Use Change was calculated for the intervention group pre intervention and 2 weeks post intervention (case) and pre intervention and after a 2 week waiting period for the Wait Group (Control) . |
1 months | |
Secondary | Depression Change | Depression was measured using the Patient Health Questionaire, PHQ-9 (modified to 6 questions). The PHQ is a screen where respondents indicate how often the respondent has experienced depressed mood and anhedonia over the prior two weeks. Selected questions (6) were used.
Range: Minimum score: 0, Maximum score18. High scores indicate worse outcomes. The Outcome Measure is the amount of Depression Change from baseline (evaluation point #1) to evaluation point #2. Depression Change is calculated for the intervention group pre intervention and 2 weeks post intervention (case) and pre intervention and after a 2 week waiting period for the Wait Group (Control). See Baseline for more details |
1 months | |
Secondary | Resilience Change | Resilience was measured via the Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale - modified to use 2 questions from the scale.
Range: Minimum score: 0, Maximum score: 8. An increase means an improvement and higher scores mean better outcomes. A decrease means worsening; and lower values mean worse outcomes. The Outcome Measure is the amount of Resilience Change from baseline (evaluation point #1) to evaluation point #2. Resilience Change was calculated for the intervention group pre intervention and 2 weeks post intervention (case) and pre intervention and after a 2 week waiting period for the Wait Group (Control). See Baseline for more details. |
1 months | |
Secondary | Drug Use Change | Drug use in the recent past was measured via the National Institute for Drug Abuse-Modified Alcohol, Smoking and Substance Involvement Screening Test (modified to use 2 questions from this scale).
Range: Minimum 0, Maximum score 10. High scores indicate more drug use and an increase means worse outcomes. Low scores mean less drug use and a decrease means better outcomes. The Outcome Measure is the amount of Drug Use Change from baseline (evaluation point #1) to evaluation point #2. Drug Use Change is calculated for the intervention group pre intervention and 2 weeks post intervention (case) and pre intervention and after a 2 week waiting period for the Wait Group (Control). See Baseline for more details. |
1 months | |
Secondary | Happiness and Exhaustion (Quality of Life) | Happiness and Exhaustion (Quality of Life) were measured using the Medical Student Quality of Life Questionnaire with Nine Items (MSQoL9). The MSQoL is a linear self-assessment analog scale. It was modified to use only 5 of the questions from the scale that are on the domains of exhaustion and general happiness.
Range for total score on the 5 questions: 1-25 Greater increase in scores means improvement; High scores indicate better outcomes. The analysis was modified so that high scores indicate a better quality of life for all questions. The Outcome Measure is the amount of Happiness and Exhaustion (Quality of Life) Change from baseline (evaluation point #1) to evaluation point #2. Happiness and Exhaustion (Quality of Life) Change was calculated for the intervention group pre intervention and 2 weeks post intervention (case) and pre intervention and after a 2 week waiting period for the Wait Group (Control). |
2 weeks- 1 month |
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