Stress, Psychological Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Mixed Methods Evaluation Study of Brief Mindfulness-based Stress Reduction and Brief
NCT number | NCT03756181 |
Other study ID # | A00-B21-18A |
Secondary ID | |
Status | Withdrawn |
Phase | N/A |
First received | |
Last updated | |
Start date | March 2019 |
Est. completion date | January 2021 |
Verified date | February 2019 |
Source | Lady Davis Institute |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Mental health issues are increasingly costly in Quebec. Given most psychological disorders occur before age 24, university-based interventions are appealing to prevent and treat mental illness, especially as rates of psychological distress have peaked among university students in our province. This at-risk population may benefit from new university-based programs, as academic institutions now face limited staffing and an increasing number of students seeking services. Mindfulness-based Stress Reduction (MBSR) programs are a promising approach, reporting substantial increases in emotional regulation. Novel mindful self-compassion (MSC) programs additionally display increasing improvements in resilience, that could foster stronger well-being in highly competitive academic contexts. A few high-quality scientific studies have investigated the impact of university setting MSC programs, but it remains unclear to determine whether MBSR or MSC may be useful in Canadian student populations experiencing psychological distress. This study will rigorously evaluate both programs efficacy and will be the first one to understand the student's experience in both groups.
Status | Withdrawn |
Enrollment | 0 |
Est. completion date | January 2021 |
Est. primary completion date | January 2021 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 40 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - McGill University Students (Graduate or Undergraduate Students) enrolled or seeking services within McGill Counselling and Mental Health Services - Age 18 years or older - Students should have sufficient hearing (or assistive devices) to hear verbal instructions and discussion - Have an adequate understanding of English and/or French Exclusion Criteria: - • Depression (PHQ9) and anxiety (GAD7) =12 - Acute psychotic symptoms - Severe personality problems that will interfere with their ability to function in a group setting - Acute Suicidal ideation/intent - Student scoring =12 on either scale will be immediately referred to therapeutic services offered on campus |
Country | Name | City | State |
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n/a |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
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Lady Davis Institute | McGill University |
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Home mindfulness or self-compassion practice | Home mindfulness practice will be assessed using weekly homework logs (Baer et al., 2012). Participants will be asked to record the number of minutes of daily home practice of the formal meditation practices taught in either mindfulness or self-compassion programs. They will be also asked to rate from 1 to 5 the degree to which they felt they had followed the mindfulness or self-compassion instructions (1 = not at all, 5 = very much). The instruction will be made clear so that they are not being asked whether they felt it was a "good" practice session, but the degree to which they felt they followed the instructions. | Each week throughout the intervention (weeks 1 through 5) | |
Other | Fidelity of implementation (FOI) | At the end of each session, facilitators will be asked to complete a FOI checklist based on the commonly agreed-upon dimensions of fidelity (Dane & Schneider, 1998; Dusenbury, Brannigan, Falco, & Hansen, 2003). A 'comments' section will inquire about future recommendations. We will use an online self-report of FOI similar to the used in C.-Y. S. Lee et al. (2008) that is more related to measuring the facilitator's adherence rather than competence. | Each week throughout the intervention (weeks 1 through 5) | |
Other | Participant's experience of stress | In depth interviews using the MINI (Groleau et al., 2006). The MINI provides an overall structure and sequence of questions, but interviewers must improvise additional questions and probes to clarify responses. Like any open-ended form of interviewing the MINI depends on the interviewer's understanding of the underlying research questions and the broader conceptual framework guiding the inquiry. The MINI allows for the exploration of diverse meanings and ways or reasoning held by interviewees about their experience of stress, whether contradictory or complementary. The MINI guides a conversation that produces narratives that can be used to study individual experience meanings, modes of reasoning, historical sequences, and the sociocultural contexts of experience. In this study, we will evaluate all sections of the MINI (Groleau, Young, & Kirmayer, 2006) which have been modified to address participant's experience of stress and the comparative effects of participating in both groups. | post-1 (at week-5) | |
Other | Participant's experience in the groups | In depth interviews using the MINI (Groleau et al., 2006). The MINI provides an overall structure and sequence of questions, but interviewers must improvise additional questions and probes to clarify responses. Like any open-ended form of interviewing the MINI depends on the interviewer's understanding of the underlying research questions and the broader conceptual framework guiding the inquiry. The MINI allows for the exploration of diverse meanings and ways or reasoning held by interviewees about their experience of stress, whether contradictory or complementary. The MINI guides a conversation that produces narratives that can be used to study individual experience meanings, modes of reasoning, historical sequences, and the sociocultural contexts of experience. In this study, we will evaluate all sections of the MINI (Groleau, Young, & Kirmayer, 2006) which have been modified to address participant's experience of stress and the comparative effects of participating in both groups. | post-1 (at week-5) | |
Other | Adverse events | Given the importance of participant's safety in compassion-based and mindfulness-based programs, a question on adverse events (Dobkin et al., 2012) will be collected weekly and at program end, week-5. These measures may be reported in our manuscripts. | Each week throughout the intervention (weeks 1 through 5) | |
Primary | Perceived Stress | The Perceived Stress Scale (Cohen, Kamarck, & Mermelstein, 1983; Cohen et al., 1994) is a standardized,10 item self-report questionnaire used to determine the extent to which a person perceives her or his life to be stressful, by taping experiences of distress related to "how unpredictable, uncontrollable, and overloaded respondents ?nd their lives" (Shapiro, Brown, Thoresen, & Plante, 2011). A sample question is "How often have you found that you could not cope with all the things that you had to do?" Participants responded on a 5-point scale ranging from 1 (never) to 5 (very often). Internal consistency reliability was a = .92. | Change in PSS from 0 to 5-weeks (baseline to post-1). | |
Secondary | Self-compassion | The 12-item short form of the Self-Compassion Scale (Raes et al., 2011), assesses the positive and negative aspects of the three main components of self-compassion: Self-Kindness versus Self-Judgment; Common Humanity versus Isolation; and Mindfulness versus Over-Identification (Neff, 2003). Responses are given on a 7-point scale ranging from 1 (almost never) to 7 (almost always). It has good psychometric properties, with high internal consistency and a nearly perfect correlation with the long form of the Self Compassion Scale (Raes et al., 2011). Higher scores correspond to higher levels of self-compassion. Internal reliability is a = .85. | Change in SCS from 0 to 5-weeks (baseline to post-1). | |
Secondary | Mindfulness | The Five Facets Mindfulness Questionnaire - Short (Bohlmeijer, ten Klooster, Fledderus, Veehof, & Baer, 2011) is derived from the 39 item Five Facets Mindfulness Questionnaire (Baer, Smith, Hopkins, Krietemeyer, & Toney, 2006). Mindfulness can be conceptualized as a multifaceted construct consisting of five related dimensions: Observing, Describing, Acting with Awareness, Non-judging of Inner Experience, and Non-reactivity to Inner Experience. There are 15 items in this scale, and it is rated on a 5-point Likert scale, ranging from 1 (never or very rarely true) to 5 (very often or always true). In addition to considering scores on the five sub-scales individually, facet scores can be combined to produce an overall mindfulness score. Internal consistency is a = .85 (Baer, Carmody, & Hunsinger, 2012). | Change in FFMQ from 0 to 5-weeks (baseline to post-1). | |
Secondary | Perceived Stress | The Perceived Stress Scale (Cohen, Kamarck, & Mermelstein, 1983; Cohen et al., 1994) is a standardized,10 item self-report questionnaire used to determine the extent to which a person perceives her or his life to be stressful, by taping experiences of distress related to "how unpredictable, uncontrollable, and overloaded respondents ?nd their lives" (Shapiro, Brown, Thoresen, & Plante, 2011). A sample question is "How often have you found that you could not cope with all the things that you had to do?" Participants responded on a 5-point scale ranging from 1 (never) to 5 (very often). Internal consistency reliability was a = .92. | Change in PSS will be assessed from 0 to 10-weeks (baseline to post-2). | |
Secondary | Perceived Stress | The Perceived Stress Scale (Cohen, Kamarck, & Mermelstein, 1983; Cohen et al., 1994) is a standardized,10 item self-report questionnaire used to determine the extent to which a person perceives her or his life to be stressful, by taping experiences of distress related to "how unpredictable, uncontrollable, and overloaded respondents ?nd their lives" (Shapiro, Brown, Thoresen, & Plante, 2011). A sample question is "How often have you found that you could not cope with all the things that you had to do?" Participants responded on a 5-point scale ranging from 1 (never) to 5 (very often). Internal consistency reliability was a = .92. | Change in PSS will be assessed from 5 to 10-weeks (post-1 to post-2). | |
Secondary | Depression | The Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) (Kroenke & Spitzer, 2002) represents a self-reported 9-item depression scale, and it is based on the DSM-IV criteria for major depressive disorder with responses to questions ranging from 0 ("not at all") to 3 ("nearly every day") for each item. Summed scores =10 are considered clinically significant. | Change in PHQ-9 from 0 to 5-weeks (baseline to post-1). | |
Secondary | Anxiety | The General Anxiety Disorder-7 (GAD- 7) (Spitzer et al., 2006) is a 7-item tool to measure the severity of various signs of generalized anxiety disorder on a 0 ("not at all") to 3 ("nearly every day") scale. Summed scores =10 are considered clinically significant. | Change in GAD-7 from 0 to 5-weeks (baseline to post-1). | |
Secondary | Rumination | The Ruminative Response Scale-NL-Extended (Raes et al., 2003) measures the extent to which they experience ruminative responses when feeling sad or depressed. The scale comprises 26 items with a 4-point response format ranging from 1 (almost never) to 4 (almost always). For the current study, we looked at the brooding subscale that has been identified by (Treynor, Gonzalez, & Nolen-Hoeksema, 2003). Sample items from the five-item brooding subscale include "Why do I have problems other people don't have?" and "Why can't I handle things better?" Reliability of the scale in the present sample was a = .93. | Change in RRS from 0 to 5-weeks (baseline to post-1). | |
Secondary | Perfectionism | The revised Almost Perfect Scale (APS-R) (Slaney & Ashby, 1996) is a widely used measure of perfectionism. This scale has 23 self-report items and consists of three subscales: Standards (7 items), Discrepancy (12 items), and Order (4 items). Items are responded by using a 7-point scale ranging from 1 (strongly disagree) to 7 (strongly agree) (Slaney, Rice, Mobley, Trippi, & Ashby, 2001). Reliability estimates have been reported in the moderate to high range. While two of the scales (reflecting high standards and an appreciation of order) measure adaptive perfectionism, a third scale (discrepancy) measures maladaptive perfectionism. Internal consistency has been reported from mid-range to low range (Vandiver & Worrell, 2002). | Change in APS-R from 0 to 5-weeks (baseline to post-1). | |
Secondary | Connectedness | The Social Connectedness Scale-Revised (Lee et al., 2001) comprises 20 items and measures the degree of interpersonal closeness that individuals feel with other people, both friends, and society. Sample items include "I feel disconnected from the world around me." Responses were given on a 6-point scale ranging from 1 (strongly agree) to 6 (strongly disagree), with higher scores corresponding to a stronger sense of belonging. The scale has been shown to have good test-retest and internal reliability. Internal reliability in the present study was a = .91. | Change in SCS from 0 to 5-weeks (baseline to post-1). | |
Secondary | Optimism | The Life Orientation Test-Revised (LOT-R) is used to measure levels of dispositional optimism (Scheier et al., 1994). The LOT-R comprises 10 items assessing the extent to which individuals expect favorable outcomes for the future (e.g., "I'm always optimistic about my future"). Of the 10 items, three are positively phrased, three are negatively phrased, and four are filler items. Responses are given on a 5-point Likert scale ranging from 0 (strongly agree) to 4 (strongly disagree). After reverse scoring the three negatively phrased items, a total LOT-R score can be calculated by adding scores of all items. Higher scores correspond with higher levels of optimism. The LOT-R has been shown to have good psychometric properties. Reliability of the scale in the present sample was a = .73. | Change in LOT-R from 0 to 5-weeks (baseline to post-1). | |
Secondary | Self-efficacy | The General Self-Efficacy scale (Schwarzer & Jerusalem, 2010), is used to measure participants' beliefs in their ability to deal with potentially challenging situations. It comprises 10 statements (e.g., "I am confident that I could deal efficiently with unexpected events"), rated on a 4-point scale ranging from 1 (not at all true) to 4 (exactly true). Reliability of the scale in the present sample was a = .81. | Change in SES from 0 to 5-weeks (baseline to post-1). |
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