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Evaluation of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy for life and a cognitive behavioural therapy stress-management workshop to improve healthcare staff stress: study protocol for two randomised controlled trials.

Trials
January 1, 1970
Clara Strauss et al. (6 authors)
Clinical Trial ProtocolJournal ArticleHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to determine whether a one-day CBT stress-management workshop and an 8-session MBCT-L course effectively reduce stress and improve mental health outcomes in healthcare workers compared to a wait-list control.

Results Summary

The study protocol outlines plans to evaluate stress reduction, sickness absence, compassion, and other mental health outcomes, but results are not yet reported in the abstract.

Population

Healthcare staff working in the UK's National Health Service.

Effective Dosage

8-session MBCT-L course (frequency not specified).

Duration

8 sessions (duration not specified).

Interactions

None mentioned.

Extracted Claims (17)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
stress-management courses based on cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) principles
decrease
stress in the workplace
-
-
strongest evidence for effectiveness in reducing
#1
mindfulness-based interventions (MBIs)
decrease
stress in the workplace
-
-
strongest evidence for effectiveness in reducing
#2
a one-day CBT stress-management workshop
decrease
healthcare staff stress
staff working in the National Health Service in the UK
-
examining whether ... are effective at reducing
#3
a one-day CBT stress-management workshop
decrease
other mental health outcomes
staff working in the National Health Service in the UK
-
examining whether ... are effective at reducing
#4
a one-day CBT stress-management workshop
decrease
sickness absence
staff working in the National Health Service in the UK
-
examining whether ... are effective at reducing
#5
a one-day CBT stress-management workshop
decrease
presenteeism
staff working in the National Health Service in the UK
-
examining whether ... are effective at reducing
#6
a one-day CBT stress-management workshop
increase
wellbeing
staff working in the National Health Service in the UK
-
examining whether ... are effective at enhancing
#7
a one-day CBT stress-management workshop
increase
self-compassion
staff working in the National Health Service in the UK
-
examining whether ... are effective at enhancing
#8
a one-day CBT stress-management workshop
increase
compassion for others
staff working in the National Health Service in the UK
-
examining whether ... are effective at enhancing
#9
an 8-session Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for Life (MBCT-L) course
decrease
healthcare staff stress
staff working in the National Health Service in the UK
-
examining whether ... are effective at reducing
#10
an 8-session Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for Life (MBCT-L) course
decrease
other mental health outcomes
staff working in the National Health Service in the UK
-
examining whether ... are effective at reducing
#11
an 8-session Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for Life (MBCT-L) course
decrease
sickness absence
staff working in the National Health Service in the UK
-
examining whether ... are effective at reducing
#12
an 8-session Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for Life (MBCT-L) course
decrease
presenteeism
staff working in the National Health Service in the UK
-
examining whether ... are effective at reducing
#13
an 8-session Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for Life (MBCT-L) course
increase
wellbeing
staff working in the National Health Service in the UK
-
examining whether ... are effective at enhancing
#14
an 8-session Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for Life (MBCT-L) course
increase
self-compassion
staff working in the National Health Service in the UK
-
examining whether ... are effective at enhancing
#15
an 8-session Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for Life (MBCT-L) course
increase
mindfulness
staff working in the National Health Service in the UK
-
examining whether ... are effective at enhancing
#16
an 8-session Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for Life (MBCT-L) course
increase
compassion for others
staff working in the National Health Service in the UK
-
examining whether ... are effective at enhancing
#17
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Healthcare workers experience higher levels of work-related stress and higher rates of sickness absence than workers in other sectors. Psychological approaches have potential in providing healthcare workers with the knowledge and skills to recognise stress and to manage stress effectively. The strongest evidence for effectiveness in reducing stress in the workplace is for stress-management courses based on cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) principles and mindfulness-based interventions (MBIs). However, research examining effects of these interventions on sickness absence (an objective indicator of stress) and compassion for others (an indicator of patient care) is limited, as is research on brief CBT stress-management courses (which may be more widely accessible) and on MBIs adapted for workplace settings. METHODS/DESIGN: This protocol is for two randomised controlled trials with participant preference between the two trials and 1:1 allocation to intervention or wait-list within the preferred choice. The first trial is examining a one-day CBT stress-management workshop and the second trial an 8-session Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for Life (MBCT-L) course, with both trials comparing intervention to wait-list. The primary outcome for both trials is stress post-intervention with secondary outcomes being sickness absence, compassion for others, depression symptoms, anxiety symptoms, wellbeing, work-related burnout, self-compassion, presenteeism, and mindfulness (MBCT-L only). Both trials aim to recruit 234 staff working in the National Health Service in the UK. DISCUSSION: This trial will examine whether a one-day CBT stress-management workshop and an 8-session MBCT-L course are effective at reducing healthcare staff stress and other mental health outcomes compared to wait-list, and, whether these interventions are effective at reducing sickness absence and presenteeism and at enhancing wellbeing, self-compassion, mindfulness and compassion for others. Findings will help inform approaches offered to reduce healthcare staff stress and other key variables. A note of caution is that individual-level approaches should only be part of the solution to reducing healthcare staff stress within a broader focus on organisational-level interventions and support. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ISRCTN Registry, ISRCTN11723441 . Registered on 16 June 2017. Protocol Version 1: 24 April 2017. Trial Sponsor: Sussex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust (ResearchGovernance@sussexpartnership.nhs.uk).

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Attitude of Health PersonnelBurnout, ProfessionalCognitive Behavioral TherapyEnglandHealth Knowledge, Attitudes, PracticeHealth PersonnelHumansMental HealthMindfulnessOccupational StressRandomized Controlled Trials as TopicState MedicineTime FactorsTreatment OutcomeWorkplace
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy75/10
Quality85/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations10
Citations/Year1.4
Relative Citation Ratio0.92
NIH Percentile47%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.50
Weight Score1.72
Normalized Score0.67
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