A newer version of this project is available. See below for other available versions.
Feasibility and effectiveness of an adapted mindfulness-based intervention to reduce stress in the workplace: a non-randomized controlled pilot trial in the Spanish context
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) Javier García-Campayo, Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria Aragón (IIS Aragón)
Version: View help for Version V2
Name | File Type | Size | Last Modified |
---|---|---|---|
BASE-SESE.sav | application/x-spss-sav | 11.1 KB | 03/26/2019 12:31:AM |
Project Citation:
García-Campayo, Javier. Feasibility and effectiveness of an adapted mindfulness-based intervention to reduce stress in the workplace: a non-randomized controlled pilot trial in the Spanish context. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2019-03-26. https://doi.org/10.3886/E108743V2
Project Description
Summary:
View help for Summary
The prevalence of stress at work is high, contributing to health
problems, reduced productivity and a burden for society. Mindfulness-based interventions
may reduce stress,
but they are very demanding due to the amount of practice required. We aimed to
evaluate the feasibility of delivering a Workplace-Adapted Mindfulness-Based
Intervention (WA-MBI) of 7 weekly, 2-hour sessions to employee volunteers and the potential effectiveness of the
WA-MBI in reducing stress. A
non-randomized, two-arm, waitlist-controlled feasibility trial was carried out.
Measurements were taken in a pre-test, post-test and 6-month follow-up. Recruitment
and attrition ratios, acceptability, credibility and perceived stress were
assessed. The differences between groups were evaluated using mixed-effects
models. A 64.2% reduction from the initial group of volunteers (n=190) to the
final group of participants (n=68) was observed. The attrition rate at the 6-month follow-up was 45.6% (n=37). Subjects in the WA-MBI
group attended a mean of 4.53 (SD=2.06) sessions. The mean credibility value was 7.58 (SD=1.07). Significant decreases
in perceived stress favouring the MBI group at post-test (B=-3.65; p=0.003) and
6-month follow-up (B=-6.20; p<0.001) were observed. The WA-MBI
appears to be a feasible and potentially effective programme to reduce stress in
the workplace. However, more efforts to improve the practical aspects that favour
enrolment and reduce attrition would be desirable.
Scope of Project
Subject Terms:
View help for Subject Terms
Mindfulness;
MBI;
WA-MBI;
feasibility;
stress;
workplace
Geographic Coverage:
View help for Geographic Coverage
Spain
Universe:
View help for Universe
People who were working in the central delegation of a Spanish transport
company in February 2018
Data Type(s):
View help for Data Type(s)
clinical data
Methodology
Response Rate:
View help for Response Rate
The study was integrated into a voluntarily training course to reduce
stress that was offered by the human resources section to the 300 people who
were working in the central delegation of a Spanish transport company in
February 2018. A total of 190 workers agreed to participate in the study on the
condition of being able to choose the group in which they would participate; thus,
randomization was not viable.
From all of the volunteers who initially agreed to participate, a total of 122 workers did not complete the baseline assessment and were therefore excluded from the study. The participants were allowed to choose the group in which they wished to participate, with 32 of them included in the experimental group and 36 in the wait-list control group, for a total of 68 participants at baseline.
From all of the volunteers who initially agreed to participate, a total of 122 workers did not complete the baseline assessment and were therefore excluded from the study. The participants were allowed to choose the group in which they wished to participate, with 32 of them included in the experimental group and 36 in the wait-list control group, for a total of 68 participants at baseline.
Sampling:
View help for Sampling
Non-randomized, two-arm, waitlist-controlled feasibility trial.
Collection Mode(s):
View help for Collection Mode(s)
web-based survey
Scales:
View help for Scales
Psychological scales:
-Perceived Stress Scale (PSS): The scale is composed of 10 items asking about the frequency of thoughts and feelings experienced during the last month with a Likert-type scale with 5 response options, from 0 (‘never’) to 4 (‘very often’).
-Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale (SWEMWBS): It is a self-report questionnaire that is composed of 7 items that are ranked by a Likert-type scale from 1 (‘never’) to 5 (‘always’).
-Work Satisfaction Scale (WSS): It asks about 5 topics: the relationship with the superior, relationships with other workers, the level of assigned responsibility, acknowledgement obtained for work well done and attention to suggestions. The degree of satisfaction for each of these items is assessed using a Likert-type scale with 7 response options, from 1 (‘very unsatisfied’) to 7 (‘very satisfied’).
- Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire (FFMQ): Respondents indicate on a 5-point Likert-type scale the degree to which each item is true for them, from 1 (‘never true’) to 5 (‘always true’).
Socio-demographic variables: age, sex, relationship (yes, no), number of children, residence (urban, non-urban), level of education (primary, secondary, university), years of service, sick leave in the last year (yes, no), type of contract (temporary, permanent), income satisfaction (not satisfied, slightly satisfied, moderately satisfied, very satisfied), minutes of vigorous weekly physical activity, and mindfulness practice during the previous six months (yes, no).
Adaption of the ‘Credibility/Expectancy Questionnaire (CEQ): This scale comprises 6 items rated between 0 (‘not at all’) and 10 (‘very much’) and assesses how logical, successful, recommendable, useful, helpful and non-aversive the intervention is. The internal consistency for the total score (that ranges between 0 and 10).
-Perceived Stress Scale (PSS): The scale is composed of 10 items asking about the frequency of thoughts and feelings experienced during the last month with a Likert-type scale with 5 response options, from 0 (‘never’) to 4 (‘very often’).
-Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale (SWEMWBS): It is a self-report questionnaire that is composed of 7 items that are ranked by a Likert-type scale from 1 (‘never’) to 5 (‘always’).
-Work Satisfaction Scale (WSS): It asks about 5 topics: the relationship with the superior, relationships with other workers, the level of assigned responsibility, acknowledgement obtained for work well done and attention to suggestions. The degree of satisfaction for each of these items is assessed using a Likert-type scale with 7 response options, from 1 (‘very unsatisfied’) to 7 (‘very satisfied’).
- Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire (FFMQ): Respondents indicate on a 5-point Likert-type scale the degree to which each item is true for them, from 1 (‘never true’) to 5 (‘always true’).
Socio-demographic variables: age, sex, relationship (yes, no), number of children, residence (urban, non-urban), level of education (primary, secondary, university), years of service, sick leave in the last year (yes, no), type of contract (temporary, permanent), income satisfaction (not satisfied, slightly satisfied, moderately satisfied, very satisfied), minutes of vigorous weekly physical activity, and mindfulness practice during the previous six months (yes, no).
Adaption of the ‘Credibility/Expectancy Questionnaire (CEQ): This scale comprises 6 items rated between 0 (‘not at all’) and 10 (‘very much’) and assesses how logical, successful, recommendable, useful, helpful and non-aversive the intervention is. The internal consistency for the total score (that ranges between 0 and 10).
Unit(s) of Observation:
View help for Unit(s) of Observation
Individuals
Related Publications
Published Versions
Report a Problem
Found a serious problem with the data, such as disclosure risk or copyrighted content? Let us know.
This material is distributed exactly as it arrived from the data depositor. ICPSR has not checked or processed this material. Users should consult the investigator(s) if further information is desired.