Mental Wellbeing Clinical Trial
Official title:
Preliminary Evaluation of a Mental Health Program: a Comparison Study
The mental hygiene challenge is a Royal Ottawa Health Care Group led initiative to engage the staff, clients and community members to attend to their mental well-being by way of practicing mental hygiene activities for 10 min on a daily basis, throughout the month of March. Participants are encouraged to choose one or many of the practices recommended and do them for about 10 minutes a day. Participants are encouraged to make it their own, in that they can combine the practice or tailor them in a way that suits them best. When signing up for the challenge, participants receive free access to a toolkit with brief outlines and instructional videos on various mental hygiene practices. We also encourage participants to divide the 10 minutes in whatever way best works for them, such as 10 minutes all at once, 5 minutes twice, or even 2 minutes five times. This study aims to expand on the work that was done in 2022 and 2023, when the World Health Organization - 5 Wellbeing Index (WHO-5) and the Warwick Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale (WEMWBS) were collected from participants to ascertain the impact of mental hygiene, by way of including a control group.
Although mental hygiene is a relatively novel idea, the term can be found in the early 20th century literature. Tremblay et al. {2021) essentially reintroduced the concept and proposed its framework in the scientific literature. Within public health guidelines, there are standard recommendations given to the public in terms of maintenance of various dimensions of their health. For example, the Canadian Dental Association recommends 2 minutes of teeth brushing twice daily. The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends 150 minutes of moderate physical activity per week for the average adult to support physical health. Showering daily, and frequent hand washing have become embedded in public awareness. As of yet, there is no such well-defined equivalent vis-à-vis mental health in terms of a standardized universal recommendation. Tremblay et al. (2021) proposed a mental hygiene framework that seeks to address this gap and move towards a standardized public facing mental health recommendation equivalent to those that already exist for other dimensions of health. The mental hygiene toolkit is free, accessible and provided through a social equity lens so that anyone from any walk of life can engage in mental wellness without barriers such as cost or availability of time. Our preliminary program evaluation findings of the survey data for both years (2022 and 2023) showed a promising signal, which is prompting us to prepare this study that will be built into the 2024 Mental Hygiene Challenge that will involve a control group. It is imperative to continue acquiring empirical data on the impact daily mental hygiene practices has on one's mental wellbeing. The mental hygiene framework is grounded in 5 main categories of mental training activities. They include: meditation (mindfulness and other techniques), positive psychology interventions, self-directed cognitive behavioral therapy exercises (CBT), pro-social prayer (referring to prayers of thanks and praying for others vs. ritualist/obligatory and supplication prayers), and nature exposure. Our objective is to gain a better understanding of the impact the mental hygiene challenge has on the wellbeing of its participants for the upcoming Mental Hygiene Challenge of March 2024. In order to do that, we aim to conduct pre-post wellbeing surveys using validated psychometric measures for participants of the challenge. Moreover, we intend to conduct the same pre-post wellbeing survey approach with a control group who will be given standard self-care recommendations. The comparison of the two groups we hope, will offer insight on the impact mental hygiene has on those who participate daily. Our overall objective is to determine the impact on mental wellbeing as measured by the WHO-5 and WEMWBS that the mental hygiene challenge of March 2024 will have on its participants. Specifically, we aim to: - Test the hypothesis that there is a statistically significant change (increase) in the mental wellbeing scores for those that completed the challenge and participated daily. - To test the hypothesis that the change (increase) in pre-post wellbeing scores in the mental hygiene group will be statistically significantly higher compared to any pre-post change in wellbeing scores of the control group. - Test the association between participation level and post wellbeing scores. Participation levels will be measured by asking in the post survey how many days they participated in mental hygiene (or self-care) as well as indexing the number of completed daily surveys as an indicator of participation. ;
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