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The purpose of this research is to find effective ways of well-being promotion in higher education settings. A unique mindfulness training was developed that includes cognitive, emotional, social, and spiritual components. The training is being delivered during class-time of the following courses: Personal Development and College Success, Understanding Health Behavior, and Health Promotion and Disease Prevention. The objective of the study is to explore the training in regard to dosage effects and the incremental effect of spirituality. While the proximal targets of the intervention are well-being and stress, the ultimate targets are grades and persistence in college.
The hypotheses to be tested are:
The study is designed as an experimental longitudinal study using a 2 X 3 factorial repeated measures design. The 2 level factor is mindfulness and mindfulness plus spirituality. The 3 level factor is the dose of the intervention (i.e., control, one class a week, and two classes a week).
This study is the efficacy study of the MSW pilot study (#519)(Fall 2017 and Spring 2018). It will have about 200 participants and will use biometric measures such as salivary cortisol and sleep quality, in addition to the self-report measures. The participants are the HDFS 1311 Personal Development and College Success, HLT 3301 Understanding Health Behavior Theory and Practice, and HLT3381 Health Promotion and Disease Prevention courses students. Two sections of the HDFS 1311 course were assigned to Mindfulness only, and Mindfulness with Spirituality training; another two sections are low-dose control groups, and one section is the no-treatment control group. HLT 3301 is assigned to be Mindfulness only, HLT3381is Mindfulness with Spirituality.
Acceptability and feasibility of the mindfulness training were pilot-tested during the 2017-2018 academic year. Participants thought that the training was helpful, engaging, practical, understandable, pleasant, and relevant to their life as a student at a rate between 94- 100%. The study defines spirituality as the diffusion of the transcendental meaning over the relationship with the self, the immediate social environment, and consequently the wider world. Thus, spirituality can potentially create meaning and purpose in one's life, a variable of which predicts academic self-regulation and GPA and positively related to the treatment of depression and anxiety.
The self-report measures are Pemberton Happiness Index; Five Facet Mindfulness Scale; Intrinsic Spirituality Scale; DASS Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale; and Pittsburg Sleep Quality Index. The participants' GPA will be accessed through the UH Records Office if FERPA conditions are met.
The baseline data were collected at the beginning of the Fall semester and will be collected at the end of the semester. Additional follow-up data will be collected at the end of the Spring semester. The proximal outcomes of the study are well-being, stress, anxiety, depression, and fall semester grades. Adherence to intervention, intervention delivery quality, and participant engagement are going to be controlled through checklists filled by independent observers; instructor effect will be controlled by rotating the instructors.
The groups will be compared on all of the variables involved in this study, examining for dosage effects and effects of spirituality. There will also be an analysis of correlations between variables, such as the correlation between well-being and grades. The group comparison data have a multilevel structure, with repeated measures nested within individuals and individuals nested in classrooms. The initial plan is to conduct a 2X3 repeated measures ANOVA. If there are large differences in the groups on participant characteristics at baseline, a 2 X 3 ANCOVA will be used. If there are large intraclass correlations in the nested data, investigators will conduct multi-level modeling to examine group differences.
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mindfulness only training | Experimental | Face to face twice weekly 10 minutes training of Mindfulness only training. |
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| Mindfulness with spirituality | Experimental | Face to face twice weekly 10 minutes training of Mindfulness only training plus the Spirituality components. |
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| Low dose Mindfulness only | Experimental | Face to face once weekly 10 minutes training of Mindfulness only training. |
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| Low dose Mindfulness with Spirituality | Experimental | Face to face once weekly 10 minutes training of Mindfulness only training plus the Spirituality components. |
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| No treatment | No Intervention | No intervention is being delivered, however, participants are led to believe that they are receiving some degree of a mindfulness training embedded in their regular course curriculum. |
| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mindfulness Training | Behavioral | The participants are given strategies of mindfulness, asked to complete worksheets and participate in meditations. |
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| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Change in GPA | Unofficial, and official GPA records collected through permission granted by the participants. UH uses a 4 point GPA scale, higher score representing better academic achievement. The highest and lowest scores are 4 and 0. | Collected at the beginning of the semester before the intervention started and at the end of the semester within two weeks period (November and December 2018), and 5 months after the completion of the intervention (May 2019) |
| Change in reported well-being score measured by Pemberton Happiness Index | Pemberton Happiness Index(PHI) is a self-report measure that measures the degree of agreement to the 11 statements such as "I am very satisfied with my life". A 10-point Likert scale is used, the high score representing better well-being. Also, it has another section that asks for 10 positive and negative events that happened yesterday through a Yes/No checklist. This leads to another score highest 10, lowest 0, which is added to the total score of the previous 11 items. The highest and lowest scores are 120 and 0. PHI yields four types of well-being scores: General, hedonic, eudaimonic, social | Study had 3 iterations. For all, data is collected at the beginning and end of the semester, before the intervention started, and at the end of the intervention. For 1 iteration, follow up data was collected 5 months after the intervention ended. |
| Change in depression, anxiety, stress symptoms measured by Depression Anxiety Stress Scale | Depression Anxiety Stress Scale (DASS) is a self-report measure that asks the participants about the symptoms of depression, anxiety, and stress as they apply to them in the past week. It uses a 4 point Likert scale, the highest score representing more intense experience of symptoms. The highest and lowest scores are 63 and 0. | Study had 3 iterations. For all, data is collected at the beginning and end of the semester, before the intervention started, and at the end of the intervention. For 1 iteration, follow up data was collected 5 months after the intervention ended. |
| salivary cortisol levels measured by Enzyme Immunoassay Technique |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Change in reported mindfulness score measured by Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire | Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire is a self-report measure that uses a 5 point Likert scale to represent the opinion of the participants about the presented statements in terms of its intensity . "When I'm walking, I deliberately notice the sensations of my body moving." is an example item that participants mark how true it is for them (never or always true). Highest score represents a higher mindfulness quality. Possible highest and lowest scores are 195 and 39. |
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Inclusion Criteria: College students over 18. -
Exclusion Criteria: None
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| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Gulden H Esat, PhD | University of Houston | Principal Investigator |
| Bradley H Smith | University of Houston | Study Chair |
| Facility | Status | City | State | ZIP | Country | Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| University of Houston | Houston | Texas | 77204 | United States | ||
| Gulden Esat |
Raw data of self-report data will be shared.
August 2020
Researchers need to contact the PI to request the data.
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D001008 | Anxiety Disorders |
| D003863 | Depression |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D001523 | Mental Disorders |
| D001526 | Behavioral Symptoms |
| D001519 | Behavior |
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D064866 | Mindfulness |
| D026443 | Spiritual Therapies |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D015928 | Cognitive Behavioral Therapy |
| D001521 | Behavior Therapy |
| D011613 | Psychotherapy |
| D004191 | Behavioral Disciplines and Activities |
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This study is designed as an experimental longitudinal study using a 2 X 3 factorial repeated measures design. The 2 level factor is mindfulness and mindfulness plus spirituality. The 3 level factor is the dose of the intervention (i.e., control, one class a week, and two classes a week).
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Participants are blind to their conditions.
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Saliva was collected from the two intervention groups and sent to the laboratory for analysis of the cortisol level found. |
| At the end of semester (November 2018) collected within a week period. |
| time spent in deep, light, and REM sleep measured by activity tracker | Sleep quality was tracked with activity trackers from the two intervention groups. Students wore a Fitbit device for three days. | At the end of semester (November 2018) collected within a week period. |
| Change in sleep quality measured by Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index | PSQI- Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index is a self-report measure that uses a 4 point Likert scale of frequency that represents the problems encountered related to the quality of sleep (Cannot get to sleep within 30 minutes). The higher frequency would yield to a lower sleep quality index score. The highest and lowest scores are 57 and 0. | Collected only for the first iteration of the study:at the beginning and end of the semester, before the intervention started, and at the end of the intervention. For 1 iteration, follow up data was collected 5 months after the intervention ended. |
| Change in Community Involvement | Self-report of community involvement through a Yes/No response to the following question: Are you involved in any community service (church, non-profit organization, or individual)? | Collected only for the first iteration of the study:at the beginning and end of the semester, before the intervention started, and at the end of the intervention. For 1 iteration, follow up data was collected 5 months after the intervention ended. |
| Collected only for the first iteration of the study:at the beginning and end of the semester, before the intervention started, and at the end of the intervention. For 1 iteration, follow up data was collected 5 months after the intervention ended. |
| Change in reported spirituality measured by Intrinsic Spirituality Scale | The Intrinsic Spirituality Scale is a self-report measure using a degree of agreement scale with 10 Likert points. The items are stated to prompt the participants to choose their level of spirituality. The following is an example item: In terms of the questions I have about life, my spirituality answers no questions ( a score of 0), or all of my questions ( a score of 10). The possible highest and lowest scores are 60 and 0, the highest score indicating a higher spirituality level. | Collected only for the first iteration of the study:at the beginning and end of the semester, before the intervention started, and at the end of the intervention. For 1 iteration, follow up data was collected 5 months after the intervention ended. |
| Change in reported affect measured by Positive and Negative Affect Schedule- Calm-Focus | The measure assesses positive and negative emotions in children and adults. The measure includes 10 items consisting of single words indicating positive and negative affect (e.g. sad, happy, scared, cheerful). The scale had two more items measuring "calm" and "focus" which are conceptualized to represent a mindfulness state. Participants are asked to rate how often they have felt this way during the past week using a 5-point scale with responses: never, a little, moderately, quite a bit, and extremely. | Collected for the second and third iterations of the study at the beginning and and at the end of each mindfulness lesson. The lessons lasted between 10 to 15 minutes. |
| Houston |
| Texas |
| 77479 |
| United States |
| D000529 | Complementary Therapies |
| D013812 | Therapeutics |