| Literature DB >> 30560515 |
Anne Puolakanaho1, Raimo Lappalainen2, Päivi Lappalainen3, Joona S Muotka2, Riikka Hirvonen2, Kenneth M Eklund4, Timo P S Ahonen2, Noona Kiuru2.
Abstract
Acceptance and commitment therapy programs have rarely been used as preventive tools for alleviating stress and enhancing coping skills among adolescents. This randomized controlled trial examined the efficacy of a novel Finnish web- and mobile-delivered five-week intervention program called Youth COMPASS among a general sample of ninth-grade adolescents (n= 249, 49% females). The intervention group showed a small but significant decrease in overall stress (between-group Cohen's d = 0.22) and an increase in academic buoyancy (d= 0.27). Academic skills did not influence the intervention gains, but the intervention gains were largest among high-stressed participants. The results suggest that the acceptance and commitment based Youth COMPASS program may be well suited for promoting adolescents' well-being in the school context.Entities:
Keywords: Academic buoyancy; Acceptance and commitment therapy; Adolescents; Mobile intervention; Randomized controlled trial; Stress
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30560515 PMCID: PMC6394525 DOI: 10.1007/s10964-018-0973-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Youth Adolesc ISSN: 0047-2891
Fig. 1Flowchart. Note: The inclusion and exclusion criteria1 for the target population were as follows: Belonged to the larger longitudinal study basic group; had written consent for participating in the intervention; was a native Finnish speaker; and had previous data concerning reading and math skills and achievement scores from grades 6 and 7. Randomization2 was conducted in two phases: First, an equal number of male and female adolescents with poor academic skills were identified. Second, an equal number of same-sex classmates who had normally developed academic skills were randomized into the study. All participants were randomly allocated into three study conditions by an independent researcher
Participants in the different groups and analyses
| Initial phase characteristics | iACTface group ( | iACT group ( | Control group ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| P | |||
| Female | 44 (54.3) | 37 (46.3) | 38 (46.3) |
| Male | 37 (45.7) | 43 (53.7) | 44 (53.7) |
| Normally developing academic skills | 41 (50.6) | 40 (50.0) | 40 (48.8) |
| Poor academic skills | 40 (49.4) | 40 (50.0) | 42 (51.2) |
| Unknown reason for poor academic skills | 18 (22.2) | 16 (20.0) | 18 (22.0) |
| Reading problems | 9 (11.1) | 11 (13.8) | 11 (13.4) |
| Math problems | 7 (8.6) | 7 (8.8) | 8 (9.8) |
| Both reading and math problems | 6 (7.4) | 6 (7.5) | 5 (6.1) |
|
| |||
| 64 (79.0) | 58 (72.5) | 82 (100) | |
|
| |||
| Female | 39/5 | 33/4 | 38/0 |
| Male | 25/12 | 27/17 | 4/0 |
Two different analytical protocols (intention-to-treat and per-protocol) were used, as recommended for intervention studies (Ranganathan et al. 2016)
Sample characteristics in the three groups
| Baseline characteristics | All ( | iACTface group ( | iACT group ( | Control group |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age M ( | 15.27 ( | 15.25 ( | 15.27 ( | 15.29 ( |
|
| ||||
| Female | 124 (51%) | 44 (54.3%) | 37 (46.3%) | 38 (46.3%) |
| Male | 119 (49%) | 37 (45.7%) | 43 (53.8%) | 44 (53.7%) |
|
| ||||
| Finnish | 230 (94.7%) | 77 (95.1%) | 74 (92.5%) | 79 (96.3%) |
| Other than Finnish | 8 (3.3%) | 3 (3.7%) | 3 (3.8%) | 2 (2.4%) |
| Bilingual (Finnish + some other language) | 4 (1.6%) | 1 (1.2%) | 2 (2.5%) | 1 (1.2%) |
|
| ||||
| Mother and father | 167 (68.7%) | 52 (64.2%) | 59 (73.8%) | 56 (68.3%) |
| Only with mother or father | 20 (8.2%) | 12 (14.8%) | 4 (4.1%) | 4 (4.9%) |
| Alternately with mother and father | 38 (15.6%) | 11 (13.6%) | 12 (15.0%) | 15 (18.3%) |
| Othersa | 14 (5.7%) | 4 (4.9%) | 3 (3.8%) | 7 (8.5%) |
|
| ||||
| A/B/C (%)b | 33/25/42 (%) | 34/20/46 (%) | 41/22/37 (%) | |
| missing casesc | 21 | 9 | 14 | |
aLiving with mother and stepfather, father and stepmother, foster care or approved home. Parental education level: bA = vocational upper secondary education or lower, B = vocational college degree, C = Bachelor’s degree or higher. Information of education level was missingc in some cases
The structure and content of the youth COMPASS intervention and related coaching activities
| Core modules | Aims | Levels (L1 to L3) and themes | Coach’s Questionsa | Examples of exercises and activities |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0. Introduction | Brief orientation to the online intervention | Getting started: Introduction (text & video)/Be Your Own Life’s Hero (3 videos) | A brief introduction to the Youth COMPASS program (worksheet) | |
| 1. Direction For Life | Recognition of activities that provide energy, well-being, and joy. | Introduction | What is important to you? What could you do today or tomorrow to add joy and energy in your life? Do it! | Text, video, and comic strip |
| 2. Me And My Mind | Exploring automatic thoughts and feelings. Acceptance of thoughts, feelings, and memories as they are. | Introduction | You can choose how to relate to your own thoughts. Try to act differently from what your mind suggests. | Video: Is The Mind So Clever? |
| 3. “Stalking Myself” | Taking a new stance on my thoughts and feelings. Learning how to be mindful here and now and applying these skills to everyday life. | Introduction | Tell us what kinds of skills—related to being in the moment—you have used in your everyday life. What kinds of consequences did you observe while using them? | Video and comic strip: Feelings in My Body |
| 4. Me and Myself | Perceptions of oneself and learning to take a different perspective to one’s thoughts and emotions and applying these skills to one’s own life | Introduction | Kindness toward self is important. How can you treat yourself kindly (in a similar manner as your friend who has difficulties)? | Text, video, and comic strip |
| 5. Me and Other People | Promoting good relationships with friends and other people and applying ACT-based skills to social life. | Introduction | What kinds of good things have you done for other people in the past week, or what could you do next week? | Text, video, and comic strip |
Coach’s Questionsa: All weekly contacts were started using two basic questions: (1) How are you doing? (2) Please rate your mood over the last week on a scale from 4–10. These were followed by the third question presented above. bBOLD is an exercise by Ciarrochi et al. (2012)
Mean scores and standard deviations at pre- and post-measurement in the intervention and control groups
| Scale | Group | Pre-M (SD) | Post-M (SD) | Post- and Pre-Wald Test change estimate (df = 1), One-tailed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall Stress | INTERVENTION | 3.10 (1.45) | 2.91 (1.23) | 3.19 |
| CONTROL | 2.80 (1.22) | 2.91 (1.33) | ||
| School Stress | INTERVENTION | 2.84 (0.81) | 2.84 (0.77) | 2.49 |
| CONTROL | 3.00 (0.83) | 2.85 (0.92) | ||
| Academic Buoyancy | INTERVENTION | 3.46 (0.83) | 3.69 (0.75) | 4.91 |
| CONTROL | 3.73 (0.78) | 3.74 (0.82) |
In the INTERVENTION group, the participants from the iACTface and iACT groups (n = 123) were combined. CONTROL group n = 82
* = p < 0.05
Between-group and within-groups effect sizes (Cohen’s d, corrected)
| Scale | Between pre-post (corrected Cohen’s d) | Within INTERVENTION Pre–Post | Within CONTROL Pre–Post |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overall Stress | 0.22* | 0.14 | 0.08 |
| School Stress | 0.18 | 0.01 | 0.17 |
| Academic Buoyancy | 0.27* | 0.28* | 0.01 |
In the INTERVENTION group, the participants from the iACTface and iACT groups (n = 123) were combined. CONTROL group n = 82
* = p < .05
Mean scores and standard deviations at pre- and post-measurement in intervention groups
| Scale | Group | Pre-M (SD) | Post-M (SD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overall Stress | iACT | 2.98 (1.33) | 2.73 (1.18) |
| iACTface | 2.91 (1.53) | 2.87 (1.30) | |
| School Stress | iACT | 2.93 (0.80) | 2.88 (0.76) |
| iACTface | 2.88 (0.85) | 2.85 (0.77) | |
| Academic Buoyancy | iACT | 3.53 (0.84) | 3.75 (0.79) |
| iACTface | 3.54 (0.86) | 3.70 (0.79) |
In the iACT group (n = 80), iACTface (n = 81)