Group Meetings Clinical Trial
Official title:
Feasibility and Preliminary Efficacy Testing of Therapy Integrating Peer-sharing, Technology, Aerobic and Resistance Training (TIPSTART) to Reduce Symptoms of Mental Illness in First-generation College Students
The purpose of this randomized controlled clinical trial with first-generation college students with symptoms of mental illness is to test the preliminary feasibility and efficacy of TIPSTART, a multi-faceted, mental health and exercise training program-involving 5.5 hours of training delivered via assistance of remote technology, a licensed therapist and certified exercise behavior change specialist, and supported by peer pods-relative to a group receiving usual care. Students will confirm they are not currently treated with medication but have received mental health services in the past two years, and meet symptom cutoff criteria using a standard field screening assessment. It is hypothesized that the 10-week training program initiated at the onset of an academic semester will improve students' symptoms of anxiety and depression. Further, it is also expected that greater physical activity, self-efficacy, and social and academic engagement among participants in the TIPSTART group as compared to the usual care condition. Finally, the potential role of TIPSTART in changes in resilience, self-regulatory functioning and schoolwork-life balance will be explored.
First-generation college students are at risk of serious mental illness. Relative to their peers, they are more likely to work full time, take fewer classes, use public transportation, and engage less with on-campus programs. Further, they report more traumatic stress, lower life satisfaction and less support from parents and peers. These findings are compounded by nationwide estimates of rising mental health issues across college campuses, where nontraditional students with financial hardship and/ or care-giving burdens represent the majority, and counseling services are increasingly under-resourced and overburdened. Moreover, less than 50% of college students are meeting public health guidelines for physical activity participation, a health behavior known to mitigate risk and enhance mental health. Traditional four-year colleges and universities represent an opportunity to implement evidence-based mental health services, but many campuses are disconnected, low mental health-resource environments lacking well-coordinated programs specifically tailored for first-generation students, particularly cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) or programs guided by CBT principles, in concurrence with physical activity guidance and support. Evidence suggests that multimodal programs consisting of therapy integrating peer-support (in the form of pods), technology, aerobic plus resistance training (TIPSTART) has the potential to increase self-efficacy and self-regulatory strategies, utilization and maintenance of mental health services and behavior change techniques, and ultimately, reduce symptoms of mental illness. In the last decade, digital health interventions (e.g. smartphone apps) have been used with college-age populations to make therapy more accessible and exercise more enjoyable and socially-supported. App-based interventions have been successfully delivered as standalone interventions and have yielded positive effects on mental health outcomes, socio-emotional functioning and health behavior engagement. The purpose of this randomized controlled clinical trial is to test the feasibility and preliminary efficacy and implementation of TIPSTART, a multi-faceted, mental health and exercise training program involving 5.5 hours of supervised training delivered via assistance of remote technology, a therapist and exercise behavior change specialist, and supported by peer pods (relative to a wait-list control group who will receive usual care) among first-generation college students with symptoms of mental illness. Students will confirm receipt of mental health services in the past two years, and meet cutoff criteria using a standard field screening assessment. It is hypothesized that the 10-week training program initiated at the onset of an academic semester will improve students' symptoms of anxiety and depression. Further, it is also expected that greater physical activity, self-efficacy, and social and academic engagement among participants in the TIPSTART group as compared to the usual care condition. Finally, the potential role of TIPSTART in changes in resilience, self-regulatory functioning and schoolwork-life balance will be explored. ;
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