Group interventions to promote mental health in health professional education: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials

被引:0
作者
Kristin Lo
Jamie Waterland
Paula Todd
Tanvi Gupta
Margaret Bearman
Craig Hassed
Jennifer L. Keating
机构
[1] Monash University,Department of Physiotherapy
[2] Monash University,Subject Librarian, Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences
[3] South Eastern Private Hospital,Department of General Practice
[4] HealthPEER Monash University,undefined
[5] Monash University,undefined
来源
Advances in Health Sciences Education | 2018年 / 23卷
关键词
Mental health; Health professional student; Mindfulness; Cognitive-behavioural; Relaxation; Psychoeducation; Systematic review; Meta-analysis;
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摘要
Effects of interventions for improving mental health of health professional students has not been established. This review analysed interventions to support mental health of health professional students and their effects. The full holdings of Medline, PsycINFO, EBM Reviews, Cinahl Plus, ERIC and EMBASE were searched until 15th April 2016. Inclusion criteria were randomised controlled trials of undergraduate and post graduate health professional students, group interventions to support mental health compared to alternative education, usual curriculum or no intervention; and post-intervention measurements for intervention and control participants of mindfulness, anxiety, depression, stress/distress or burnout. Studies were limited to English and short term effects. Studies were appraised using the PEDro scale. Data were synthesised using meta-analysis. Four comparisons were identified: psychoeducation or cognitive-behavioural interventions compared to alternative education, and mindfulness or relaxation compared to control conditions. Cognitive-behavioural interventions reduced anxiety (−0.26; −0.5 to −0.02), depression (−0.29; −0.52 to −0.05) and stress (0.37; −0.61 to −0.13). Mindfulness strategies reduced stress (−0.60; −0.97 to −0.22) but not anxiety (95% CI −0.21 to 0.18), depression (95% CI −0.36 to 0.03) or burnout (95% CI −0.36 to 0.10). Relaxation strategies reduced anxiety (SMD −0.80; 95% CI −1.03 to −0.58), depression (−0.49; −0.88 to −0.11) and stress (−0.34; −0.67 to −0.01). Method quality was generally poor. Evidence suggests that cognitive-behavioural, relaxation and mindfulness interventions may support health professional student mental health. Further high quality research is warranted.
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页码:413 / 447
页数:34
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