Stress Clinical Trial
Official title:
Socio-Environmental Determinants of Psychological Functioning, Mental Health and AIDS in Mali
This project is a collaboration between the Centre Regional de Medecine Traditionnelle (CRMT)
of the Malian National Institute of Public Health Research (INRSP) and the Section on
Socioenvironmental Studies (SSES). These units developed a three-pronged protocol reflecting
their joint and individual concerns:
1. Effects of occupational complexity on psychological functioning. The project tests a
theory derived from previous SSES research demonstrating that in industrialized
societies doing relatively self-directed, substantively complex work increases
self-directed orientations to self, society and family and promotes effective
intellectual functioning. It uses sociological survey methodology to determine the
generalizability of this theory to an essentially pre-literate, preindustrial society.
2. Effects of work-related stress on mental health. Earlier SSES work demonstrated that
stressful work conditions lead to distress in industrialized societies. This project
extends the investigation of these effects to a non-industrialized setting. It also
extends the investigation of work-related stress to include work-related migration,
resting a hypothesis that relates equally to SSES and CRMT concerns: that individuals
from rural ethnic groups with a cultural tradition of work-related migration will show
fewer mental health problems when migrating for nontraditional work than those from
cultures without such a tradition. Mental health problems are assessed through: a)
adaptations of standard survey-based psychological measures of components of distress,
b) general and culture-specific survey-based psychiatric screening questions, and c) a
psychiatric interview conducted by a CRMT psychiatrist trained in internationally
accepted diagnostic procedures and knowledgeable about local cultures.
3. The effects of migration and cultural and socioeconomic factors on AIDS-related
knowledge, attitudes and behaviors. The survey addresses concern regarding the degree of
knowledge about the nature of AIDS among rural Malians who are relatively isolated from
urban oriented sources of information about culturally non-traditional issues. It also
examines how socio-cultural background and migration for work affect AIDS related
attitudes and self-reported behaviors in an African society where estimates of HIV
prevalence are still relatively low (less than 2%), compared to those of other
sub-Saharan African countries.
Although these prongs are distinguishable, each requires a longitudinal design, a
representative sample, extensive information about responders' social and cultural
backgrounds, occupational histories, work conditions, and personal orientations and beliefs.
Because of their overlapping theoretical approaches and methodological requirements,
combining them in one project increases the richness and efficiency of the data collected for
each.
This project is a collaboration between the Centre Regional de Medecine Traditionnelle (CRMT)
of the Malian National Institute of Public Health Research (INRSP) and the Section on
Socioenvironmental Studies (SSES). These units developed a three-pronged protocol reflecting
their joint and individual concerns:
1. Effects of occupational complexity on psychological functioning. The project tests a
theory derived from previous SSES research demonstrating that in industrialized
societies doing relatively self-directed, substantively complex work increases
self-directed orientations to self, society and family and promotes effective
intellectual functioning. It uses sociological survey methodology to determine the
generalizability of this theory to an essentially pre-literate, preindustrial society.
2. Effects of work-related stress on mental health. Earlier SSES work demonstrated that
stressful work conditions lead to distress in industrialized societies. This project
extends the investigation of these effects to a non-industrialized setting. It also
extends the investigation of work-related stress to include work-related migration,
testing a hypothesis that relates equally to SSES and CRMT concerns: that individuals
from rural ethnic groups with a cultural tradition of work-related migration will show
fewer mental health problems when migrating for nontraditional work than those from
cultures without such a tradition. Mental health problems are assessed through: a)
adaptations of standard survey-based psychological measures of components of distress,
b) general and culture-specific survey-based psychiatric screening questions, and c) a
psychiatric interview conducted by a CRMT psychiatrist trained in internationally
accepted diagnostic procedures and knowledgeable about local cultures.
3. The effects of migration and cultural and socioeconomic factors on AIDS-related
knowledge, attitudes and behaviors. The survey addresses concern regarding the degree of
knowledge about the nature of AIDS among rural Malians who are relatively isolated from
urban oriented sources of information about culturally non-traditional issues. It also
examines how socio-cultural background and migration for work affect AIDS related
attitudes and self-reported behaviors in an African society where estimates of HIV
prevalence are still relatively low (less than 2%), compared to those of other
sub-Saharan African countries.
Although these prongs are distinguishable, each requires a longitudinal design, a
representative sample, extensive information about responders' social and cultural
backgrounds, occupational histories, work conditions, and personal orientations and beliefs.
Because of their overlapping theoretical approaches and methodological requirements,
combining them in one project increases the richness and efficiency of the data collected for
each.
The division of responsibility between SSES and CRMT is as follows:
1. The survey questionnaire is the product of SSES/CRMT collaboration. It has been check by
Malian linguists, extensively pretested by CRMT, and found feasible to administer and
likely to provide highly reliable data with sufficient variance to permit the testing of
our hypotheses. The project has been independently review and approved by the relevant
Malian IRB the Ethics Committee and the Medical School of the University of Mali.
2. Data Collection involves conducting structured sociological interviews with
representative rural samples from three Malian ethnic groups, carrying out psychiatric
interviews with respondents who fail the psychiatric screen. The collection, processing
and coding of the data is the responsibility of CRMT.
3. Data Analysis is primarily the responsibility of the SSES, which receives the data in a
form in which individual respondents cannot be identified.
;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Completed |
NCT05130944 -
Feasibility of Community Psychosocial Intervention for Women
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT06079853 -
Nurse Suicide: Physiologic Sleep Health Promotion Trial
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT05881681 -
A Mindfulness Approach to UA for Afro-descendants
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05449002 -
Digital Single Session Intervention for Youth Mental Health
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT04038190 -
A Behavioral Activation Intervention Administered in a College Freshman Orientation Course
|
Phase 2 | |
Completed |
NCT03931772 -
Online Automated Self-Hypnosis Program
|
N/A | |
Active, not recruiting |
NCT05998161 -
Evaluating the Effectiveness of a Digital Therapeutic (Reviga) for People With Stress or Burnout
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT03728062 -
Mindfulness Meditation Versus Physical Exercise: Comparing Effects on Stress and Immunocompetence
|
N/A | |
Terminated |
NCT04367636 -
The Effects of Attention Training on Emotion Regulation and Stress Related Complaints During COVID-19
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT06405789 -
The Effect of Yoga on Mindfulness and Perceived Stress
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT06002074 -
SMART Program Impact on Quality of Life in Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05273996 -
Predictors of Cognitive Outcomes in Geriatric Depression
|
Phase 4 | |
Completed |
NCT05245409 -
Stress, EEG, ECG, and Chiropractic
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT04722367 -
Being Present With Art: The Impact of Mindful Engagement With Art on Awareness and Connection
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT06273228 -
Parenting Young Children in Pediatrics
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT06057883 -
Effects Of A Probiotic Formulation On Stress and Skin Health in Younger Adult Females
|
Phase 2 | |
Completed |
NCT05063305 -
Probiotics, Immunity, Stress, and QofL
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT05312749 -
The Effect of Web Based Progressive Muscle Relaxation Exercise on Clinical Stress and Anxiety of Nursing Students
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT05623826 -
Feasibility and Efficacy of a Digital Training Intervention to Increase Reward Sensitivity- Imager
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT04013451 -
The Kiss of Kindness Study II
|
N/A |