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A recent survey exploring mental health in a large cohort of French medical students and young graduates (N = 21.768), observed that 68.2% of participants showed pathologic anxiety. A high level of depressive symptomatology was found in 27.7% of participants, while suicidal ideation was reported by 23.7%. Mindfulness Based Interventions are beneficial for health with a positive impact on mood, anxiety, and well-being. It thus can be hypothesized that such interventions could help to prevent anxio-depressive symptomatology in medical students.
The implementation of prevention programs to promote resilience to stress and empathy among medical students is a priority, included in French National Strategy for Health. Efficacy of Mindfulness Based Interventions in French university must be studied to confirm and strengthen their development. The originality of this project consists in the collaboration of medical schools from different cities and the longitudinal follow-up.
The purpose of this study is to assess the efficacy of a mindfulness-based therapy in burnout prevention in comparison to relaxation.
Full description
Recent research highlights the positive impact of Mindfulness-Based Interventions on mental health outcomes and in the development of stress management skills and compassion. Moreover, it has been reported that Mindfulness-Based Interventions are well accepted among university students, mainly because these approaches are seen as emotional skill training rather than a mental health intervention. However, there is a lack of long-term follow-up studies testing the maintenance of benefits.
This study proposes Mindfulness-based interventions for preventive purposes in a large sample of fourth and fifth year medical students from different French cities (Montpellier, Angers, Clermont-Ferrand, Marseille, Nîmes, Paris, Saint-Etienne, Strasbourg, Tours, Lyon and Toulouse) and a one-year follow-up.
The main objective is to assess the efficacy of a Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) (intervention) vs. Progressive Muscle Relaxation Training (PMRT) (control) to prevent burnout (emotional exhaustion) of fourth- and fifth-year medical students after one-year follow-up.
The study also aims to :
The study is a single blind randomized clinical trial. Overall, 612 students from 11 French universities will be enrolled and assigned randomly to two groups:
Participants will be evaluated at four times: before the intervention (within 8 weeks), within the month following the end of the program, at 6 months and 12 months (+/- 1 month) after the completion of the program. All of the follow-up visits may be carried out remotely. The raters will be blind to treatment allocation (single-blind).
An optional qualitative study will be conducted among 30 students, during the first follow-up visit to assess the subjective experience of participation in relaxation and meditation programs.
The benefits expected from MBSR vs PMRT are to increase mental resources to manage negative emotions and psychological distress, to reduce risk of depression, to increase empathy. The perspectives are to improve the state of the art about the efficacy of MBSR for student's mental health promotion and to help the development of life skills programs for young people and students as proposed by General Direction of Health at the national level. Such programs promote low-cost and safety non-pharmacologic evidence-based interventions for psychological distress.
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612 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Carolina BAEZA VELASCO, Psychology; Emilie OLIE, MD PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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