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Promoting recovery in daily life: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial.

BMC psychology
January 1, 1970
Dorota Reis et al. (4 authors)
Clinical Trial ProtocolJournal ArticleHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to compare the effectiveness of a mindfulness-based online training program versus a cognitive-behavioral one in reducing work-related perseverative thinking (PT) and examine their underlying mechanisms.

Results Summary

The study expects both interventions to reduce work-related PT compared to a waitlist control, with mindfulness-based training improving mindfulness facets as the primary mechanism for lower PT levels. The study will analyze processes at multiple levels (daily, weekly, across weeks, and between individuals).

Population

Employees working at least part-time during regular work hours.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

6 weeks

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (6)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
6-week online cognitive behavioral training program
decrease
work-related perseverative thinking
employees working at least part-time during regular work hours
-
will reduce
#1
6-week online mindfulness-based training program
decrease
work-related perseverative thinking
employees working at least part-time during regular work hours
-
will reduce
#2
6-week online cognitive behavioral training program
decrease
work-related perseverative thinking
employees working at least part-time during regular work hours
-
will result in improvements
#3
6-week online mindfulness-based training program
decrease
work-related perseverative thinking
employees working at least part-time during regular work hours
-
will result in improvements
#4
6-week online cognitive behavioral training program
increase
recovery experiences across time
employees working at least part-time during regular work hours
-
will increase
#5
6-week online mindfulness-based training program
increase
facets of mindfulness across time
employees working at least part-time during regular work hours
-
will increase
#6
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Work-related stress shows steadily increasing prevalence rates and has tangible consequences for individual workers, their organizations, and society as a whole. One mechanism that may help offset the negative outcomes of work-related stress on employees' well-being is recovery. Recovery refers to the experience of unwinding from one's job when not at work. However, employees who experience high levels of work-related stress and are thus particularly in need of recovery tend to struggle to switch-off. Due to the detrimental effects of this prolonged and sustained mental representation of job stressors, interventions promoting recovery may contribute to improvements in employees' mental health. METHODS: In this randomized, waitlist controlled trial, we will investigate the effectiveness of two 6-week online training programs (cognitive behavioral and mindfulness-based). The sample will include employees working at least part-time during regular work hours. Besides the pre-post-follow-up assessments, the trial will include measurement bursts with the goal of examining the underlying mechanisms. We expect that both interventions will reduce work-related perseverative thinking (PT) compared with the waitlist control groups (primary outcome). Also, we expect that both interventions will result in similar improvements, but the underlying mechanisms will differ (process outcomes). In the cognitive-behavioral intervention group, we expect that the main mechanism responsible for lower PT levels will be an increase in recovery experiences across time. In the mindfulness-based group, we expect that the main mechanism responsible for lower PT levels will be an increase in facets of mindfulness across time. DISCUSSION: In the present study, we will investigate mechanisms underlying assumed changes in work-related PT in great detail. Besides evaluating the overall effectiveness of the two interventions in terms of pre-post-follow-up changes, we will look at the underlying processes at different levels-that is, within days, within weeks, across weeks, and between individuals. Accordingly, our study will offer a fine-grained approach to investigating potential determinants, mediators, and moderators of the processes that may, in the end, be responsible for work-related strain. From a public health perspective, if effective, the online training programs may offer valuable, low-threshold, and low-intensity interventions for a broad range of occupations. Trial registration German Clinical Trials Registration: DRKS00024933. Registered prospectively 7 April 2021. https://www.drks.de/drks_web/navigate.do?navigationId=trial.HTML&TRIAL_ID=DRKS00024933.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Cognitive Behavioral TherapyHumansMental DisordersMental HealthMindfulnessOccupational HealthRandomized Controlled Trials as Topic
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy75/10
Quality85/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations1
Citations/Year0.3
Relative Citation Ratio0.18
NIH Percentile9%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.25
Weight Score1.48
Normalized Score0.67
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