Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05567991 |
Other study ID # |
1Med_a |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
January 23, 2021 |
Est. completion date |
October 2, 2021 |
Study information
Verified date |
September 2022 |
Source |
University of Pavia |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
In the scientific literature, the responsibilities and pressures of medical school and
residency are widely known for putting a strain on medical student's personal wellbeing,
leading to high rates of anxiety, depression, burnout, and emotional discomfort. In this
study investigators aim at evaluating the hypotheses on the effectiveness of a comprehensive
Mindfulness-Based Intervention (MBI) in reducing this load. The intervention comprised 12
Integral Meditation (IM) classes, advice on health dietary behavior and brief yoga session.
The effect of the intervention on medical students from Italian universities will be
evaluated by performing a randomized trial through the analysis of nine questionnaires used
for measuring the psychological outcomes of interest.
Description:
In the scientific literature, the responsibilities and pressures of medical school and
residency are widely known for putting a strain on medical student's personal wellbeing,
leading to high rates of anxiety, depression, burnout, and emotional discomfort. Academic
pressure, financial concerns, workload, sleep deprivation, drugs abuse, exposure to patients'
suffering and fatalities are among the numerous causes linked to such a decrease in mental
well-being in medical studies setting. The so-called hidden curriculum is also a factor
considered in medical education. It is based on implicit teaching that includes moral and
ethical values among medical education. When this teaching goes in a negative direction such
as cynicism towards patients, future career, or competition with colleagues, can become one
of the causes that influences medical students in terms of psychological distress and
burnout. Additionally, psychological distress among students has been claimed to have a
negative impact on their academic performance, and on the increased thought of dropping out
medical school. This also leads to academic dishonesty, which includes problems such as
plagiarism, cheating, pseudoscience and falsification, and to alcohol and substance
addiction. Medical students suffering from psychological distress have a more generally lack
of empathy.
To make matters worse, the recent Covid-19 pandemic has placed an additional burden on
students around the world Aware of this situation, medical students are using different
coping strategies to reduce distress. While taking drugs and substances such as
tranquilizers, have negative or side effects, taking social support and physical activity
have positive effects only. Mindfulness-Based Interventions (MBI) is an effective complement
to these strategies.
Mindfulness is a state of pre-reflexive consciousness that can be put in contrast with other
modalities in which the person is constantly engaged in overthinking, obsessing about the
past, fantasizing and worrying about the future or engaged in compulsive or automatic
behavior without acknowledging it. The benefits of such a state of being is well-known in
literature, so that MBIs are getting popular in medical education, to such an extent that
many medical schools around the world are beginning to acknowledge mindfulness as a helpful
practice for their students, residents, and staff with the goal of also increase patient care
quality.
Hence to develop and apply easily accessible and low-cost strategies to diminish the levels
of stress of medical students is crucial for their academic performance and professional
development.
The aim of the present study was to assess the efficacy of a comprehensive MBI, entirely
administered online, consisting of a mindfulness-based practice, called Integral Meditation
(IM), dietary advice, and brief yoga sessions, in two cohorts of Italian medical students
randomized to intervention or control group. The primary hypothesis is that participants in
the intervention group would report a decrease of perceived stress and state anxiety and an
increase of mental well-being. The secondary hypothesis investigators tested was that
participants in the intervention group would report higher scores on different measures of
positive affect, resilience, and emotion regulation and attentional control. The investigated
outcomes were measured using nine self-report questionnaires administered online to both
groups before and after the intervention.