Stress Clinical Trial
Official title:
Efficacy of Taiji Training as a Program for Stress Prevention - a Randomized, Waiting List Controlled Longitudinal Study With Healthy Subjects
Background: Excessive exposure to psychosocial stress can be a potent trigger for somatic
diseases and psychological disorders, a cause for missing work, and eventually lead to high
economic loss. Therefore, for health and economic reasons the assessment of effectiveness of
stress preventive interventions is of high relevance. According to several clinical studies,
Taiji, a Chinese form of mindful and gentle movements, can significantly reduce symptoms of
somatic diseases and psychological disorders. Some recently conducted Taiji-studies with
healthy subjects indicate a stress protective effect. However, the stress protective impact
of Taiji regarding psychosocial stress has not yet been examined.
Objective: To investigate the efficacy of a 12 week Taiji training as a stress prevention
program by measuring psychosocial stress reactivity in a laboratory setting, as well as the
subjective perception of stress and coping-resources in daily life of 70 healthy volunteers.
Hypothesis: Healthy subjects attending a 12 week Taiji course (frequency: twice a week for
1h) will show significantly reduced psychobiological reactivity, decreased stress perception
and increased coping-resources on a standardized psychosocial stress test compared with
healthy subject of the waiting list.
Background:
Excessive exposure to psychosocial stress can be a potent trigger for somatic diseases and
psychological disorders, a cause for missing work, and eventually lead to high economic
loss. Therefore, for health and economic reasons the assessment of effectiveness of stress
preventive interventions is of high relevance. According to several clinical studies, Taiji,
a Chinese form of mindful and gentle movements, can significantly reduce symptoms of somatic
diseases and psychological disorders. Some recent Taiji-studies with healthy subjects
indicate a stress protective effect. However, since these findings mainly focus on effects
during or immediately after a Taiji training session, their study designs and outcome
measures are not comparable with existing stress prevention efficacy studies and their
sample sizes are generally too small, the present available results remain inconclusive.
Also, the impact of a Taiji training on psychosocial stress has not been assessed so far.
Objective:
The objective of this study is to assess the efficacy of a 12 week Taiji training as a
stress prevention program by measuring psychosocial stress reactivity in a laboratory
setting, subjective perception of stress and coping-resources of 70 healthy subjects in
daily life.
Methods:
The Trier Social Stress Test (TSST) will be used to measure the psychobiological stress
reactivity. Salivary cortisol, alpha amylase, heart rate and heart rate variability will be
measured in each subject to asses stress reactivity, Also, the primary appraisal secondary
appraisal (PASA) questionnaire and the multidimensional mood questionnaire (MDBF) will be
used to assess psychological stress reactivity, and a visual analogue scale (VAS) to measure
perceived stressfulness.
Additionally to the TSST setting, pre-, post-intervention and 2 months follow up
measurements will be taken. The following tools will be used: Perceived Stress Scale (PSS),
Stress Reactivity Scale (SRS)(to assess perceived stress), and self-efficacy-expectancy
questionnaire (SWE), questionnaire for measuring wellbeing (FEW-16), Freiburg mindfulness
inventory (FMI) and self compassion scale (SCS) (to assess perceived coping resources).
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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