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Effects and Mechanisms of Smartphone-Based Stress Management Training on Well-Being in College Students

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Emotion Regulation
Interventions
Behavioral: Comparison intervention
Behavioral: Experimental intervention
Registration Number
NCT05518656
Lead Sponsor
Virginia Commonwealth University
Brief Summary

Studying can be a difficult time, and some students can find it challenging to deal with stress. This research project at Virginia Commonwealth University aims to understand how two different online stress management training programs affect students' daily experiences and activities. This research project will help us understand how those training programs help students to improve their emotional well-being.

Detailed Description

Participants will be randomly assigned (like the flip of a coin) to one of the two online stress management training programs. For two weeks, participants will receive daily online lessons that will teach you how to deal with stress.

To investigate how this program affects mood, researchers will monitor participant's daily activities and experiences combining brief daily surveys with activity tracking via smartphones. The activities and experiences will be tracked for a week before the training, two weeks of the training, and one week after. Shortly after the training, researchers will also reach out to participants for a phone interview where they will ask about the training experience in more detail. Afterwards, researchers will check in with participants at the end of the semester for one more week of experience and activity tracking.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
154
Inclusion Criteria
  • 18-25 years old;
  • Enrollment as a full-time student;
  • Studying in-person;
  • Reduced emotional well-being;
  • Absence of major depressive, generalized anxiety, and panic disorder diagnoses;
  • Little or no experience of the intervention;
  • Ownership of a smartphone with an OS no older than iPhone 5 or Android 5 and an active data plan.
Exclusion Criteria

• Diagnosis of major depression, generalized anxiety, and panic disorder

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Online emotion regulation training version 2Comparison intervention-
Online emotion regulation training version 1Experimental intervention-
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in lonelinessBaseline to the end of the semester, up to 15 weeks

Loneliness will be measured with the UCLA Loneliness Scale an instrument assessing frequency of felt social disconnection.

Change in social connectionBaseline to the end of the semester, up to 15 weeks

Connection to others will be measured with the Two-Way Social Support Scale

Changes in daily well-beingBaseline to the end of the intervention, 4 weeks

Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) will include items to measure mood, loneliness, felt social connection and school belonging, and interactions with others. EMA surveys will be administered through the AWARE app.

Change in depressionBaseline to the end of the semester, up to 15 weeks

Depressive symptoms will be measured using Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale

Change in anxietyBaseline to the end of the semester, up to 15 weeks

Anxiety symptoms will be measured using Beck's Anxiety Inventory

Changes in daily experiencesBaseline to the end of the intervention, 4 weeks

Smartphone passive sensing will be accomplished through AWARE which will record frequency (but not content) of short message service (SMS) text messaging and calls, location and mobility (to assess out-of-home departures), and nearby Bluetooth addresses (to assess social proximity). A conversation plugin will make surrounding sound inferences (without retaining audio recordings), including presence of other voices.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Virginia Commonwealth University

🇺🇸

Richmond, Virginia, United States

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