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Psychological stress occurs when an individual perceives that environmental demands tax or exceed his or her adaptive capacity. In this view, stressful experiences are conceptualized as person-environment transactions, whose result is dependent on the impact of the external stimulus. This is mediated by the person's appraisal of the significance of the stimulus, of the personal, social and cultural resources available and of the efficacy of the coping efforts.
Extreme levels of stress can have a negative influence on one's professional life and can disrupt both the social and personal life of an individual. Stress can also cause different physiological and psychological disorders such as anxiety, chronic headaches, depression, withdrawal symptoms, nausea, phobias, blood pressure problems, heart impairments and others.
Stress Management Therapy can help to overcome counter effects of stress. Usually various techniques are used including relaxation, interaction, biofeedback and Cognitive Behavior Therapy methods. According to the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews the best validated approach covering both stress management and stress treatment is the Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) approach.
The trouble with stress is that it is very personal. Thus, stress-related disorders depend a great deal on how the person experiencing a stressor is put together -psychologically and physically. So the focus for assessment, prediction and treatment has to be the person's situated experience.
To overcome the above limitations, the INTERSTRESS project suggests the adoption of a new paradigm for e-health - Interreality - that integrates contextualized assessment and treatment within a hybrid environment, bridging physical and virtual world.
From the clinical point of view the INTERSTRESS solution may offer the following innovations to current traditional protocols for stress management:
Full description
The present trial is based on a randomized controlled study. We will recruited at least 100 participants, that will be split into two groups of at least 50 subjects who suffer from psychological stress: 1) the experimental group 2) the control group. Participants included in the experimental condition will receive a treatment based on cognitive behavioral techniques combined to virtual reality, biofeedback and mobile phone, while the control group will receive traditional stress management CBT-based training, without the use of new technologies. Psychometric and physiological outcomes will serve as quantitative dependent variables, while subjective reports of participants will be used as qualitative dependent variable.
Different settings are planned for the training: Clinical, Home and Mobile Setting.
Following, a description of the protocol in details, both for the experimental and the control group, in the three different settings.
Afterwards, participants will receive a training for psychological stress management based on cognitive behavioral techniques combined to virtual reality, biofeedback and mobile phone. The training will be structured into ten sessions (two per week, each one lasting about one hour), which will be divided into four parts:
Relaxation will be induced through the immersion in different virtual environments (e.g., lake) which will be customized with different pre-recorded audio narratives that describe the specific setting and that guide the execution of a series of relaxation exercises. Experimental group will be exposed both to relaxing VR environments and to VR biofeedback, in alternate way during sessions.
18-months follow up is planned in order to verify the efficacy of the training over a long-term period.
In particular, guided imagery will be employed as a stress exposition and for relaxation exercises. The smart phone for stress assessment will be replaced by a traditional diary, where to mark stressful event during the assessment week. In order to obtain comparable measures with the experimental group, participants in the control condition will be assessed during the training with the same questionnaires and their physiological measures will be recorded during each session. As to home setting, instead of Second Life participants will receive a book about psychological stress, with the same contents included in that virtual island.18-months follow up is planned in order to verify the efficacy of the training over a long-term period.
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100 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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