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Active clinical trials for "Burnout, Psychological"

Results 161-170 of 265

Improving Health of Nurses With Burnout Through Positive Psychological Intervention

Burnout

Burnout is usually regarded as a response to chronic professional stressors like high workload, unfavorable emotion and complex interpersonal relationships. A high prevalence of burnout was found in many countries, and large-scale studies also showed high levels of burnout in Chinese nurses. As a stress-related syndrome, burnout was found to have detrimental influences on both psychological and physical health of nurses. Psychological problems such as depression and insomnia are verified to be associated with burnout. Endocrine dysfunction such as abnormal cortisol secretion rhythm occurred in shift-work nurses. Thyroid dysfunction was increasing and a sample of nurses were diagnosed with thyroid nodules and thyroid hormonal disorder during annual physical examination. Therefore, it is important to take measures to alleviate nurses' burnout to improve health. Positive psychological interventions are defined as treatment methods or intentional activities to enhance person's positive emotions, cognitions and behaviours. In these methods and activities, people are usually required to finish a systematic exercise. According to a recent meta-analysis, Positive psychological interventions showed effectiveness in enhancing participants' well-being and reducing depressive symptoms. Therefore, this study aims to explore whether positive psychological intervention could reduce burnout and improve health of nurses.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Provider-Patient Communication Coaching

Provider BurnoutCommunication

To examine the effect of a coaching intervention on provider burnout and communication

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction for Metro Nashville Public School Employees

Self-compassionBurnout3 more

Stress, anxiety, and depression are common symptoms among public school teachers. Public school teachers are among the top professions reporting stress, anxiety, and depression. The causes are multifactorial and include work-related demands, challenges with students, limited resources, and compassion fatigue. Because of this, teachers are at risk of burnout and leaving or changing their profession. The COVID-19 pandemic has had a considerable impact on teachers due to disruptions in usual education delivery and ability to support students. Recent reports show poorer mental health and decreases in physical activity in teachers since the onset of the pandemic. Effective and implementable strategies are urgently needed to address poor mental health and to foster positive health characteristics in this population. Mindfulness programs decrease feelings of stress, anxiety, and emotional exhaustion. Additionally, mindfulness can improve self-compassion, which may be an important mediating factor in a teacher population. Prior work has shown an inverse relationship between self-compassion and burnout. Currently, there are few studies investigating whether building self-compassion can reduce burnout in public school teachers. The investigators will explore therelationship between participation in a Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) course and changes in burnout, self-compassion, and other whole person health measures in an educator population. The overall objective of this open pilot study is to examine the feasibility and acceptability of an 8-week remote, group-based MBSR program delivered over Zoom for Metro Nashville Public Schools (MNPS) personnel reporting elevated stress, anxiety, and/or depressive symptoms. Our pilot study results will contribute to the evidence on MBSR in a public-school employee population and inform strategies to optimize implementation of our remote MBSR program within the Vanderbilt Health at MNPS system.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Burnout Reduction and Engagement App-based Trial of Headspace (BREATHE)

BurnoutProfessional

The purpose of this research is to develop a mobile app-based intervention to reduce burnout and improve well-being using human-centered design principles and stakeholder feedback.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Experimental Intervention on the Influence of Six Weeks' Content Knowledge on Students' Written...

Educational ProblemsStudent Burnout

Brief Summary . This experiment aims to use two different teaching methods to intervene in students' learning and find out which teaching method is more conducive to improving students' written test achievement. The experiment will use a 6-the investigator seek workshop intervention to enhance students' written test achievement. The investigation is divided into workshop groups and standard teaching groups. The most significant difference better investigators the two groups are that the workshop group has oral links and guarantees. The similarities between investigators in the two groups are teacher qualifications, intervention time, content, and research objects. Based on content knowledge learning, content knowledge is divided into six categories for detailed intervention. First, the investigators will do a 6-the investigator seek intervention for two groups (workshop style and standard teaching style). The difference better investigators two is whether there is a video teaching link, and the same is that there are oral links. The entire experiment was carried out in the classroom with the school's consent. Use written exams to check student scores. Students have special teachers responsible for teaching specific content knowledge during class, standard learning after class does not require special care, and the experiment is not risky. Hypothesis including as follow:1 ) General Hypothesis. There is no significant difference in the written test results of the prior theoretical knowledge 、health promotion knowledge、 physical exercise knowledge control group, with experimental group performance among PE students in China. 2) Specific Hypothesis. The specific hypothesis of this study is to investigate the effect of a 6-weeks content knowledge workshop on written test performance among PE students in China. The detailed hypothesis is: There is no significant difference between the control and experimental groups in the sports training design、the teaching design 、the muscle function system、the exercise physiology、the competition venue planning、the referee rules written test performance among PE students in China.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Effects of Mindfulness Practice on Healthcare Workers

Psychological Burnout

This study aims to examine the effects of mindfulness practice administered using a mobile app on psychological health among health care workers in Singapore.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

The Effect of Laughter Yoga on Nurses' Perceived Stress Burnout and Life Satisfaction During the...

Abdominal SurgeryHypertension2 more

This study aimed to determine the effects of laughter yoga on the perceived stress, burnout and life satisfaction of nurses working actively during the pandemic period. A total of 120 nurses, determined by power analysis, were included in the randomized controlled study. The study included 2 groups. (A group of nurses who have active contact with patients diagnosed with or at risk of covid-19, group B: nurses who have active contact with patients diagnosed with or at risk of covid-19 and participate in laughter yoga practice. Laughter yoga; immune system antibodies and endorphin hormone. It has been proven by experimental studies that there is a connection between the two, that it has a healing effect, that it accelerates the circulatory system as an adverse effect to stress, and that it has a vasodilation effect in the vessels.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

The Impact of Professional Coaching on Early Career Academic Emergency Physicians

DevelopmentHuman8 more

This research study is designed to answer the question: How does professional coaching impact early career academic emergency medicine physician goal attainment, leadership strengths, well-being, and burnout?

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Return to Work After a Workplace-oriented Intervention for Patients on Sick Leave Due to Burnout...

Professional Burnout

The study aims to evaluate the effect on return to work of a workplace intervention with patients being treated for burnout. The intervention intends to reduce job-person mismatch through patient-supervisor communication.The hypothesis is that the intervention group will show a more favourable outcome than a control group with respect to return to work.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Inner Engineering Online (IEO) Intervention for a Specific Company Employee Program

BurnoutStress2 more

In this randomized controlled trial; differences in overall stress, burnout and wellbeing will be assessed for employees of a company participating in Inner Engineering Online, an online mind-body course that incorporates both meditation and yoga. The study will be conducted in two phases, where in participants will be advised to practice meditation or read books.

Completed4 enrollment criteria
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