Emotion Regulation Clinical Trial
— MASHUP1Official title:
A Pilot Feasibility Study for an Emotion Regulation Skills Training (ER4ALL) for Students in Higher Education
Verified date | March 2023 |
Source | University of Cyprus |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
In the present study, the investigators aim to examine the feasibility of a classroom-based emotion regulation skills training within a tertiary curriculum. The primary objective of this study is to assess the acceptability and feasibility of the "ER4ALL", a brief course for enhancing emotion regulation skills for students in higher education. The secondary objective of this study is to collect preliminary evidence for beneficial effects in increasing students' acquired knowledge on adaptive emotion regulation, thus improvement on general psychological wellbeing. A two-arm pilot RCT will be conducted in University of Cyprus.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 50 |
Est. completion date | February 28, 2024 |
Est. primary completion date | October 30, 2023 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria - People who are enrolled as students in the university Exclusion criteria - No specific exclusion criteria. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Cyprus | University of Cyprus | Nicosia |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Cyprus | Eotvos Lorand University, University of Crete, VU University of Amsterdam |
Cyprus,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Participants characteristics | Questions concerning sociodemographic characteristics (age, gender, education level, academic field, preference for randomization condition, previous history / previous use of mental health services). | up to 10 weeks | |
Other | Fidelity | To support the establishment of competency, instructors will be invited to:
Fill procedural fidelity checklists after each session, to self-assess whether or not the training objectives were met as outlined in training and in the guidebook. Fidelity total scores will be reviewed. An external evaluator will attend 2 randomly selected sessions and rate the sessions using fidelity checklists. |
up to 10 weeks | |
Primary | Feasibility of the course | At post-training, principal researchers involved in the development and delivery of the intervention in each site, will complete Structured Assessment of FEasibility (SAFE; Bird et al. 2014), a standardised measure of the feasibility of complex interventions (Bird et al. 2014). The SAFE measure comprises 16 items grouped into two sub-scales: Blocks (8 items) and Enablers (8 items). SAFE guidelines recommend that reviewers attend to the individual items of the scale, instead of using summary scores, since items have unequal weight. ?he tool has shown excellent interrater reliability (k = 0.84, 95% CI 0.79-0.89) and test-retest reliability (k = 0.89, 95% CI 0.85-0.93). | up to 10 weeks | |
Primary | Acceptability of the course | At post-training, all participants will complete a course satisfaction/acceptability questionnaire. The questionnaire will consist of two parts: In part A (quantitative) students will be asked several Likert-scale questions, while part B (qualitative) while contain open-ended response questions relating to their experience, satisfaction, and the challenges/enablers associated with design and implementation of the course. Qualitative data from open-ended questions will be considered alongside the quantitative measures to assess the feasibility of the intervention. The feasibility and acceptability of the intervention will be evaluated, using multiple primary endpoints such as:
Adherence (Total registrations, Attendance Rates, Homework Adherence, Dropouts) Course acceptability and satisfaction ratings Training preference. |
up to 10 weeks | |
Secondary | Emotion Beliefs Questionnaire | The EBQ (Becerra, Preece, & Gross, 2020) is a 16-item self-report measure of beliefs about emotions. Based on Ford and Gross's (2019) theoretical framework, the EBQ assesses two main categories of beliefs about emotions: beliefs about the controllability of emotions and beliefs about the usefulness of emotions. These beliefs are assessed for negative emotions and positive emotions. Four subscale scores and three composite scores are designed to be derived from the measure, with higher scores indicating more maladaptive beliefs about emotions (i.e., stronger beliefs that emotions are uncontrollable and useless). The scale has demonstrated good concurrent validity (EBQ scores correlated significantly in expected ways with various scores from other measures of beliefs about emotions), as well as validity and internal consistency in its initial validation (a = .88; Becerra, Preece, & Gross, 2020). | up to 10 weeks | |
Secondary | Acceptance and Action Questionnaire-II | Acceptance and Action Questionnaire-II (AAQ-II; Bond et al., 2011) is a 7-item measure of psychological flexibility rated on a 7-point scale (Cronbach's a = 0.84). It assesses the ability to be fully present in the moment and adjusting behaviors based on the situational demands, personal values and goals. Higher total score means less flexibility. | up to 10 weeks | |
Secondary | Psyflex | Psyflex (Gloster, et al 2021) is a 6-item self-report questionnaire designed to measure in a brief and context-sensitive manner all six facets of psychological flexibility based on Acceptance and Commitment Theory. Items are rated on a scale from 5 ("very often") to 1 ("very rarely") and then summed. Higher scores represent higher psychological flexibility. Confirmatory Factor Analysis confirmed a one-factor structure with excellent reliability (Raykov's r = 0.91). | up to 10 weeks | |
Secondary | Positive Mental Health Scale (PMH-scale) | The 9-item PMH-scale was developed in order to provide a brief, uni-dimensional and person-centered instrument to assess positive mental health (Lukat et al. 2016). The PMH-scale assesses mainly emotional, but also psychological and social aspects of well-being. Participants respond to statements such as "I am in good physical and emotional condition" or "I manage well to fulfill my needs" on a scale ranging from 0 (I disagree) to 3 (I agree). Higher scores reflect greater positive mental health. Psychometric testing confirmed the scale to be a unidimensional self-report instrument with high internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha .82-93), good retest-reliability (r between samples >.74), and good convergent and discriminant validity (e.g. positive correlation with satisfaction with life, r = .75), (Lukat et al. 2016). | up to 10 weeks | |
Secondary | Depression Anxiety Stress Scales (DASS-21) | DASS-21 (Henry, & Crawford, 2005) is a general mental health tool consisting of three scales (7 items per scale) measuring states of depression, anxiety and stress on a 4 point Likert scale (0 'almost always' to 4 'never'). ?igher scores indicating a greater number of symptoms. The DASS-21 subscales show good internal consistency (Cronbach's a = 0.81- 0.88). | up to 10 weeks | |
Secondary | Brief Multidimensional Students' Life Satisfaction Scale-College (BMSLSS-C) | BMSLSS-C (Zullig et al. 2009) is a brief version of MSLSS addressing circumscribed aspects of college students´ life. In specific it consists of 9 items, one for each of the following life satisfaction domains LSS (family, friends, school, self, and living environment, romantic relationships, physical appearance, and work). Higher scores represent higher college satisfaction. The scale has shown an acceptable reliability (a=.80), and criterion-related validity (significantly correlated with the CDC HRQOL-14 and Social Isolation Scale in predicted directions) in its initial validation. | up to 10 weeks | |
Secondary | University Student Learning Disabilities Questionnaire | University Student Learning Disabilities Questionnaire (Glenn et al., 1997) is a screening evaluation of behavioral and cognitive characteristics exhibited by college students in learning and testing situations. A higher score represents higher Learning Difficulties. During its initial validation, a logistic regression analysis verified the predictive capability of the final subset of items, which has also shown high test-retest reliability (.83; Glenn et al., 1997). | up to 10 weeks |
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