Viewing Study NCT06502314



Ignite Creation Date: 2024-10-25 @ 7:51 PM
Last Modification Date: 2024-10-26 @ 3:34 PM
Study NCT ID: NCT06502314
Status: COMPLETED
Last Update Posted: None
First Post: 2024-07-08

Brief Title: The Effectiveness of Stress Management Training on Perceiving and Coping With Stress and Developing Resilience
Sponsor: None
Organization: None

Study Overview

Official Title: The Effectiveness of Stress Management Training Given to First-class Health Students in Perceiving and Coping With Stress and Developing Resilience A Randomized Controlled Trial
Status: COMPLETED
Status Verified Date: 2024-07
Last Known Status: None
Delayed Posting: No
If Stopped, Why?: Not Stopped
Has Expanded Access: No
If Expanded Access, NCT#: N/A
Has Expanded Access, NCT# Status: N/A
Acronym: None
Brief Summary: Associate degree students studying in the field of health perform their professions in the status of intermediate staff related to health in our country They are in direct or indirect contact with every segment of the society within the health system They are also in a multidisciplinary team This enables them to interact within the team Therefore it can be clearly said that the stress they will be in may affect other team members In previous studies in the literature it is seen that more studies have been conducted with undergraduate health professional candidates However considering that associate degree health students start their professional life at a younger age it can be thought that they may have more difficulties in coping with the stress that the health sector may cause This situation can be facilitated by strengthening their psychological resilience In this study it can be said that it is important to provide stress management training and measure its effectiveness by taking these factors into consideration It can be thought that the results will contribute to the importance by filling the gap in the literature

Objective This study was a pretest-posttest randomised controlled psychoeducational intervention in which the effect of stress management training given to first-year health students on their perceived stress coping methods and psychological resilience was examined

Research hypotheses H1 Perceived stress post-test scores of first-year health students who received stress management training will be lower than those who did not receive the same training

H2 The post-test scores of the first-year health students who received stress management training will be higher than the post-test scores of the students who did not receive the same training

H3 First-year health students who receive stress management training will have higher psychological resilience post-test scores than students who do not receive the same training

Methods The study was conducted with 102 health students 51 intervention and 51 control Randomly assigned intervention group received stress management training consisting of 7 modules for 7 weeks No intervention was given to the control group Data were collected using sociodemographic form perceived stress scale stress coping methods scale and short psychological resilience scale Pre-test and post-tests were administered to both groups
Detailed Description: This study which examined the effect of stress management training given to health students on students perceived stress coping methods with stress and psychological resilience The population of this pretest-posttest randomised controlled study consisted of 126 first-year health students studying in the associate degree departments of the central vocational school of a health university in western Turkey The sample consisted of students who met the inclusion criteria and voluntarily accepted to participate in the study The study was completed with 102 students 51 intervention-51 control First-year associate degree health students who voluntarily accepted to participate in the study who were 18 years of age or older and who were continuing their active education were included in the study Students who did not meet the specified inclusion criteria were excluded from the study The students participating in the study were not informed which group they were in Single blinding method was used in the study because the researcher was involved in group allocation intervention and data collection tasks A total of 126 first-year students studying at a vocational school were evaluated by the researcher according to the inclusion or exclusion criteria As a result 102 participants were randomised and assigned to the intervention and control groups In order to reduce selection bias in determining the intervention and control groups the individuals to be included in the sample were determined using the wwwrandomorg website The dependent variables of the study are perceived stress scale coping methods with stress scale and short psychological resilience scale Stress management training is the independent variable Sociodemographic data of the students were the control variable of the study In this face-to-face study students who met the inclusion criteria were randomised and assigned to the groups In the first interview with the students assigned to the intervention and control groups students were informed about the purpose of the study and the process and pre-tests were applied to the students after their consent was obtained After 1 week students randomly assigned to the intervention group were given psychoeducation on stress management consisting of 7 modules each lasting 120 minutes with a break on a day determined during the week for 7 weeks Stress management training was given by the researcher who has a masters degree in Community Mental Health Nursing and a doctoral degree in Mental Health and Psychiatric Nursing and has received training on stress and coping with stress Two weeks after the training was completed post-tests were applied to the intervention and control group students During this process no intervention was applied to the control group After the study was completed the same stress management training was given to the control group For the scales used in the study permission was obtained from the authors who developed the scales and conducted the adaptation studies into Turkish Written permission was obtained from the ethics committee of the university where the study was conducted number 202403-04 on 05032024 for ethical compliance and implementation Informed consent was obtained after explaining the purpose of the study to the students participating in the study In addition the ethical principles of the current Helsinki Declaration were adhered to during the study In this study firstly power analysis was performed to determine the sample size Mean and standard deviation were used as descriptive statistics for quantitative variables determined by measurement and number and percentage were used as descriptive statistics for qualitative variables determined by counting Chi-square test and Fishers exact test were used to analyse the similarity of the groups After the normality analyses showed that the data had a normal distribution independent sample t test and dependent sample t test were used for comparisons of pre-test and post-test scores within and between groups Analysis of covariance ANCOVA was used to determine the effectiveness level of psychoeducation In order to determine the effect size Eta Squared µ² values were taken into consideration and these values were interpreted by taking the values determined by Cohen as criteria small if 01 medium if 06 and above and large if 14 and above Cronbachs Alpha was calculated for reliability analysis Analyses were performed with Statistical Package for the Social Sciences version 25 and p005 was considered statistically significant in comparisons

Study Oversight

Has Oversight DMC: None
Is a FDA Regulated Drug?: None
Is a FDA Regulated Device?: None
Is an Unapproved Device?: None
Is a PPSD?: None
Is a US Export?: None
Is an FDA AA801 Violation?: None