At a glance
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Effects of an Intervention to Enhance Resilience in Physical Therapy Students
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Resilience Curriculum for Psychological Stress. Completed, enrolled 43 participants across 2 sites.
Detailed Summary
Health professional students experience high levels of psychological stress. Individuals with higher levels of resilience are better equipped to handle stress. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effects of an 8-hour resilience curriculum on stress levels, resilience, coping, protective factors, and symptomatology on students enrolled in a doctor of physical therapy (DPT) program. Hypothesis: The curriculum will decrease stress levels, increase resilience, coping flexibility, protective factors (optimism, positive affect, and social support), and reduce symptomatology (negative affect, illness). Research on stress and its consequences experienced by physical therapy students in particular is limited. If the results of this study support this hypothesis, it may establish the benefit of adding a resilience component to the curriculum for students of physical therapy.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
The Resilience Curriculum consists of 4 modules, with one 2-hour module presented each week.