Stress Clinical Trial
— MindfulstudOfficial title:
Mindfulness for Students
The aim of the study is to find out, weather the students' wellbeing and functional ability can be enhanced by two different type of mindfulness interventions: 1) face-to-face group-based training, and 2) internet-based training based in mindfulness and acceptance and commitment therapy. Study results may be used to decide whether it is worth offering mindfulness training for medical faculty students, and what kind of training would be most suitable and effective in the medical education context.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 120 |
Est. completion date | April 15, 2019 |
Est. primary completion date | April 15, 2019 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | N/A and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - All undergraduate students of Faculty of Medicine, University of Helsinki who have started their studies in year 2009 or after that. Exclusion Criteria: - The participants that can not participate fully to the intervention (self-evaluated). - Participants who have severe mental problems (like anxiety or depression) when the study starts, - Participants who have hade a great loss or trauma in near past, or some other mental or physical health problem that could make participation difficult. This is evaluated based on how the participants answers to the base line questionnaire the following measures: 1. answers to the CORE-OM questionnaire and 2. answers to the questions where participants evaluate themselves their anxiety, depression, mental health. 3. If participant tell they have some other mental disorder, they are not accepted to the study. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Finland | University of Helsinki | Helsinki | University Of Helsinki |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Helsinki University | Technische Universität Dresden, University of Cambridge, University of Jyvaskyla |
Finland,
Daya Z, Hearn JH. Mindfulness interventions in medical education: A systematic review of their impact on medical student stress, depression, fatigue and burnout. Med Teach. 2018 Feb;40(2):146-153. doi: 10.1080/0142159X.2017.1394999. Epub 2017 Nov 7. — View Citation
Galante J, Dufour G, Vainre M, Wagner AP, Stochl J, Benton A, Lathia N, Howarth E, Jones PB. A mindfulness-based intervention to increase resilience to stress in university students (the Mindful Student Study): a pragmatic randomised controlled trial. Lan — View Citation
Miller R, Wankerl M, Stalder T, Kirschbaum C, Alexander N. The serotonin transporter gene-linked polymorphic region (5-HTTLPR) and cortisol stress reactivity: a meta-analysis. Mol Psychiatry. 2013 Sep;18(9):1018-24. doi: 10.1038/mp.2012.124. Epub 2012 Sep 4. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Change from Baseline CORE-OM measure at post-intervention and 4-month follow-up. | CORE-OM, Clinical Outcomes in Routine Evaluation Outcome Measure. | It is measured three weeks before the intervention starts, immediately after the 8-week intervention is finished, and 4-month after the intervention is finished. | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline rate of stress at post-intervention and 4-month follow-up. | Cortisol as an indicator of stress which is measured from hair samples. Stadler & Kirschbaum 2012. | It is measured in the same day when the intervention starts, immediately after the 8-week intervention is finished, and 4-month after the intervention is finished. | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline rate of resilience in studies at post-intervention and 4-month follow-up. | Workplace Acceptance and Action Questionnaire (WAAQ) applied for students. Bond, Joda, and Guenole 2013; Asikainen, Hailikari, Mattson 2017. | It is measured three weeks before the intervention starts, immediately after the 8-week intervention is finished, and 4-month after the intervention is finished. | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline rate of social support in studies at post-intervention and 4-month follow-up. | Application of questionnaires of social support from Sarason et al. 1987 and Pyörälä et al. 2015. | It is measured three weeks before the intervention starts, immediately after the 8-week intervention is finished, and 4-month after the intervention is finished. | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline rate of study load in studies at post-intervention and 4-month follow-up. | Application of questionnaire of healthy work measure of Karasek & Theorell 1990. | It is measured three weeks before the intervention starts, immediately after the 8-week intervention is finished, and 4-month after the intervention is finished. | |
Secondary | Students' possibilities to influence to their own studies | Application of measures of healthy work measure. Karasek & Theorell 1990. | It is measured three weeks before the interventions start. | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline rate of functional ability in studies at post-intervention and 4-month follow-up. | Application of functional ability at work. Tuomi et al. 1998. | It is measured three weeks before the intervention starts, immediately after the 8-week intervention is finished, and 4-month after the intervention is finished. | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline rate of subjective experience of quality of life at post-intervention and 4-month follow-up. | Subjective experience of quality of life. One Likert-scale question adapted and modified from three different questionnaires. Koivumaa et al. 2000; Allardt 1973; Lundqvist & Mäkiopas 2016) | It is measured three weeks before the intervention starts, immediately after the 8-week intervention is finished, and 4-month after the intervention is finished. | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline rate of mental well-being Scale at post-intervention and 4-month follow-up. | The Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale | It is measured three weeks before the intervention starts, immediately after the 8-week intervention is finished, and 4-month after the intervention is finished. | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline rate of Personality at post-intervention and 4-month follow-up. | Parts of Big Five (Lang et al. 2011) | It is measured three weeks before the intervention starts, immediately after the 8-week intervention is finished, and 4-month after the intervention is finished. | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline rate of sense of coherence at post-intervention and 4-month follow-up. | Sence of coherence - SOC 3 (Antonovsky 1987; Schumann et al. 2003) | It is measured three weeks before the intervention starts, immediately after the 8-week intervention is finished, and 4-month after the intervention is finished. | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline rate of Resilience at post-intervention and 4-month follow-up. | Resilience scale (Wagnild & Young, 1993; Losoi et al 2013 modified) | It is measured three weeks before the intervention starts, immediately after the 8-week intervention is finished, and 4-month after the intervention is finished. | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline rate of experiences of own health at post-intervention and 4-month follow-up. | Questionnaire Kunttu et al. 2017 | It is measured three weeks before the intervention starts, immediately after the 8-week intervention is finished, and 4-month after the intervention is finished. | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline rate of quality and length of sleep at post-intervention and 4-month follow-up. | Basic Nordic Sleep Questionnaire shortened (Partinen & Gislason 1995) | It is measured three weeks before the intervention starts, immediately after the 8-week intervention is finished, and 4-month after the intervention is finished. | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline rate of fatigue in day-time at post-intervention and 4-month follow-up. | Questionnaire from Health 2000/2001 Research in Finland | It is measured three weeks before the intervention starts, immediately after the 8-week intervention is finished, and 4-month after the intervention is finished. | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline amount of nightmares during previous month at post-intervention and 4-month follow-up. | Application of questionnaire Sandman et al 2015. | IIt is measured three weeks before the intervention starts, immediately after the 8-week intervention is finished, and 4-month after the intervention is finished. | |
Secondary | Participant's own evaluation of his/her mental health | Participant's own evaluation of the symptoms of mental health during previous month. | Three weeks before the intervention starts | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline approximate amount of exercise at post-intervention and 4-month follow-up. | Questionnaire from Health 2000/2001 Research in Finland | It is measured three weeks before the intervention starts, immediately after the 8-week intervention is finished, and 4-month after the intervention is finished. | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline regularity of eating habits at post-intervention and 4-month follow-up. | Participant's own evaluation of the regularity of eating habits. | It is measured before intervention, post-intervention and 4-month follow-up. | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline approximate amount of caffeine used daily. at post-intervention and 4-month follow-up. | Participant's own evaluation of the amount of daily caffeine use. | IIt is measured three weeks before the intervention starts, immediately after the 8-week intervention is finished, and 4-month after the intervention is finished. | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline approximate amount use of alcohol and cigarettes daily. | Participant's own evaluation of approximate amount use of alcohol and cigarettes daily. | It is measured three weeks before the intervention starts, immediately after the 8-week intervention is finished, and 4-month after the intervention is finished. | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline rate of Mindfulness skills at post-intervention and 4-month follow-up. | Freiburg Mindfulness Index (FMI) Walach, H., Buchheld, N., Buttenmüller, V., Kleinknecht, N., & Schmidt, S. 2006; Lehto, Uusitalo-Malmivaara & Repo 2015. | It is measured three weeks before the intervention starts, immediately after the 8-week intervention is finished, and 4-month after the intervention is finished. | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline rate of stress and recovery of it at post-intervention and 4-month follow-up. | Application of measures of healthy work measure of Lundqvist & Mäkiopas 2016 and Elo et al. 1992. | IIt is measured three weeks before the intervention starts, immediately after the 8-week intervention is finished, and 4-month after the intervention is finished. | |
Secondary | Previous experience in practicing of mindfulness and/or meditation | Participant's own evaluation of the amount of previous experience in practicing mindfulness and/or meditation | It is measured three weeks before the intervention starts. | |
Secondary | Amount and quality of independent mindfulness practice | Participant's self-evaluation of amount and quality of independent mindfulness practice | Immediately after the 8-week intervention is finished. | |
Secondary | Change from post-intervention amount and quality of independent mindfulness practice at 4-month follow-up. | Participant's self-evaluation of amount and quality of independent mindfulness practice. | Immediately after the 8-week intervention is finished, and 4-month after the intervention is finished. |
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