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Art and Science of Human Flourishing Microsupport Study

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Mental Stress
Interventions
Other: Text Messages
Registration Number
NCT06630897
Lead Sponsor
University of Wisconsin, Madison
Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine whether providing small amounts of digital support impacts students in the Art and Science of Human Flourishing (ASHF) course. Approximately 300 participants will be enrolled and can expect to be on study for up to 4 months.

Detailed Description

Participants will be currently enrolled students in the ASHF course. Students will complete measures at baseline, daily during the 1-month intervention period, at post-treatment, and 3 months later. During the 1-month intervention period, half of the participants will be randomized to receive small amounts of digital support in the form of text messages.

Context (from the course website): The Art and Science of Human Flourishing course is taught in tandem with the Healthy Minds Program (HMP) app. The overall framework of the ASHF course largely aligns with the HMP app and is composed of the following modules and sub-themes which are covered throughout the course of a 15-week semester:

Foundations: Flourishing, Transformation, Resilience

* Awareness: Focus, Emotions, Mindfulness

* Connection: Interdependence, Compassion, Diversity

* Wisdom: Identity, Values, Gratitude

* Integration: Courage, Community

Small amounts of digital support will be tested on half the participants. Primary Outcomes for measuring the effect of this support will be the PROMIS Depression and Anxiety Measures.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
186
Inclusion Criteria
  • Currently enrolled in ASHF course
Exclusion Criteria
  • N/A

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
MicrosupportText Messages-
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Daily Informal PracticeData collected each evening throughout the intervention (up to 1 month)

Daily informal practice will be measured by a single item: "Today, I have tried to apply the practices I have been learning in the HMP app to my day-to-day activities." Participants will respond on a Likert scale (1 = not at all, 5 = all day long). A higher score on this item indicates more informal practice on that day.

Daily psychological distressData collected each evening throughout the intervention (up to 1 month)

Daily psychological distress will be measured by two items on anxiety ("Today, I felt anxious") and depression ("Today, I felt depressed"). Participants will rate these items on a 5-point Likert scale (1 = not at all, 5 = very much). Responses to each item will be z-scored and then averaged to create a distress composite.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Composite Psychological Distress Scorebaseline, 1 month (immediately post-intervention), 4 months (3 month post-intervention follow up)

A composite psychological distress score will be obtained by computing a mean across scaled (z-transformed) scores on the computer-adaptive versions of PROMIS Depression and PROMIS Anxiety Scales and NIH Toolbox 10-item Perceived Stress. For PROMIS Depression Scale, participants score 4 to 8 items on a 5 point Likert scale from 1 (never) to 5 (always) to measure how they felt in the past 7 days. For PROMIS Anxiety Scale, participants score 4 to 8 items on a 5 point Likert scale from 1 (never) to 5 (always) to measure how they felt in the past 7 days. For NIH Toolbox 10-item Perceived Stress, participants score on a 5 point Likert scale from 1 (never) to 5 (very often) to measure how they felt in the past 7 days.

NIH Toolbox Loneliness Scorebaseline, 1 month (immediately post-intervention), 4 months (3 month post-intervention follow up)

5-item survey scored from 1 (never) to 5 (always), where higher overall scores indicate higher loneliness.

PROMIS Sleep Disturbance Scorebaseline, 1 month (immediately post-intervention), 4 months (3 month post-intervention follow up)

The computer adaptive version will draw from a bank of 27-items scored from 1 (never / very poor) to 5 (always / very good), where higher overall scores indicate greater sleep disturbance in the past 7 days.

Drexel Defusion Scale scorebaseline, 1 month (immediately post-intervention), 4 months (3 month post-intervention follow up)

10-item survey scored from 0 (not at all) to 5 (very much), where higher overall scores indicate higher defusion.

Experiences Questionnaire Decentering Scorebaseline, 1 month (immediately post-intervention), 4 months (3 month post-intervention follow up)

11-item survey scored from 1 (never) to 5 (all the time), where higher overall scores indicate higher levels of decentering.

Sense of Belonging Scorebaseline, 1 month (immediately post-intervention), 4 months (3 month post-intervention follow up)

8-item survey scored from 1 (not at all true for me) to 5 (very true for me), where higher overall scores indicate higher sense of belonging.

Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire Awareness Subscale Scorebaseline, 1 month (immediately post-intervention), 4 months (3 month post-intervention follow up)

8-item survey scored from 1 (never or very rarely true) to 5 (very often or always true) where higher overall scores indicate higher awareness.

Healthy Minds Index Scoresbaseline, 1 month (immediately post-intervention), 4 months (3 month post-intervention follow up)

17-item survey scored from 0 (not at all / never / none of the time) to 4 (to the highest degree / always / all of the time) on each of 4 domains: Awareness, Connection, Insight, Purpose. Higher overall scores indicate higher sense of awareness, connection, insight, and purpose.

Digital Working Alliance Inventory (D-WAI) Score1 month (immediately post-intervention), 4 months (3 month post-intervention follow up)

6-item survey scored from 1 (strongly disagree) to 7 (strongly agree), where higher overall scores indicate higher digital working alliance.

Mindfulness Adherence Questionnaire Score1 month (immediately post-intervention), 4 months (3 month post-intervention follow up)

10-item survey scored from 0 (never) to 6 (always), where higher overall scores indicate higher quality of mindfulness practice. A four-item subscale can be computed for formal practice and a six-item subscale can be computed for informal practice.

Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test Scorebaseline, 1 month (immediately post-intervention), 4 months (3 month post-intervention follow up)

10-item survey scored from 0 (never / no / 1 or 2) to 4 (4 or more times a week / 10 or more / daily or almost daily / yes, during the past year). Higher overall scores indicate higher alcohol use concerns.

Morning mindfulness, decentering, connection, purpose, depression, anxiety, stress, rumination, and motivation to practice scoresEach morning throughout the intervention (up to 1 month)

Morning mindfulness, decentering, connection, purpose, depression, anxiety, stress, rumination, and motivation to practice meditation will be measured by a single item, respectively. Participants will respond on a Likert scale (1 = not at all, 5 = very much). A higher score on these items indicates higher mindfulness, decentering, loneliness, purpose, depression, anxiety, stress, rumination, sleep quality, and motivation to practice meditation that morning.

Sleep quality scoresEach morning throughout the intervention (up to 1 month)

For sleep quality, participants will respond on a Likert scale (1 = very bad, 4 = very good). A higher score indicates better sleep quality.

Evening mindfulness, decentering, connection, purpose, happy event, stressor exposure, rumination scoringEach evening throughout the intervention (up to 1 month)

Evening mindfulness, decentering, connection, purpose, happy event, stressor exposure, rumination, and formal practice will be measured by a single item, respectively. Participants will respond on a Likert scale (1 = not at all, 5 = very much). A higher score on the items indicates higher mindfulness, decentering, loneliness, purpose, happiness, stress, and rumination that day.

Percentage of Participants with a formal practiceEach evening throughout the intervention (up to 1 month)

Participants will respond yes or no to whether they have a mindfulness, decentering, connection, purpose, happy event, stressor exposure, rumination formal practice. A response of "Yes" to the formal practice item indicates that the participant used the HMP app on that day, while a response of "No" indicates non-use.

Acceptability of Intervention Measure Score1 month (immediately post-intervention)

The Acceptability of Intervention Measure is a 4-item self-report measure scored on a 5-point likert scale from 1 (completely disagree) to 5 (completely agree), where higher scores indicate greater acceptability of the intervention.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Wisconsin

🇺🇸

Madison, Wisconsin, United States

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