BACKGROUND Mental health difficulties among university students have been rising rapidly over the last decade, and the demand for university mental health services commonly far exceeds available resources. Digital interventions are seen as one potential solution to these challenges. However, as in other mental health contexts, digital programmes often face low engagement and uptake; and the field lacks usable, engaging, evidence-supported mental health interventions that may be used flexibly when students need them most. OBJECTIVE The aim of this study is to investigate the feasibility, perceived impact, and acceptability of a new, in-situ intervention tool (Purrble) among university students experiencing anxiety. As an intervention, Purrble was designed to provide in-the-moment emotion regulation support---a well-known transdiagnostic construct---directly in the moments when individuals are facing emotionally challenging situations. METHODS A mixed-methods open trial was conducted, with 78 under- and post-graduate students at Oxford University. Participants were recruited based on moderate to high levels of self-reported anxiety measured by GAD-7 at baseline (M: 16.09; SD: 3.03). All participants had access to Purrble throughout 7 weeks during the spring term, with data on their perceived anxiety, emotion dysregulation, emotion regulation self-efficacy, and engagement with the intervention collected at baseline (pre-), week 4 (mid-), and week 8 (post-intervention). Qualitative responses were also collected at the mid- and post-intervention points. RESULTS Findings demonstrated a sustained engagement with Purrble over the 7 week period, with the acceptability further supported by the qualitative data indicating that students accepted Purrble and that Purrble was well-integrated into their daily routines. The quantitative data further shows large within-subject effects on student anxiety in week 7 (d = 0.96), as well as medium effects on emotion regulation self-efficacy (d = -0.56) and emotion dysregulation (d = -0.69). CONCLUSIONS This is a first trial of a simple, physical intervention that aims to provide ongoing emotion regulation support to university students. Both quantitative and qualitative data suggests that Purrble is an acceptable and feasible intervention among students, the engagement with which can be sustained at a stable level across a 7-week period, while retaining a perceived benefit for those who use it. The consistency of use is particularly promising given that there was no clinician engagement or further support provided beyond Purrble being delivered to the students. These results show promise for an innovative intervention model, which could be complementary to the traditionally more cognitively-oriented interventions.
Background Mental health difficulties among university students have been rising rapidly over the last decade, and the demand for university mental health services commonly far exceeds available resources. Digital interventions are seen as one potential solution to these challenges. However, as in other mental health contexts, digital programs often face low engagement and uptake, and the field lacks usable, engaging, evidence-supported mental health interventions that may be used flexibly when students need them most. Objective The aim of this study is to investigate the feasibility and acceptability of a new, in situ intervention tool (Purrble) among university students experiencing anxiety. As an intervention, Purrble was designed to provide in situ support for emotion regulation (ER)—a well-known transdiagnostic construct—directly in the moments when individuals are facing emotionally challenging situations. A secondary aim is to consider the perceived impact of Purrble on youth mental health, as reported by students over a 7-week deployment. Methods A mixed methods open trial was conducted with 78 under- and postgraduate students at Oxford University. Participants were recruited based on moderate to high levels of anxiety measured by Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 at baseline (mean 16.09, SD 3.03). All participants had access to Purrble for 7 weeks during the spring term with data on their perceived anxiety, emotion dysregulation, ER self-efficacy, and engagement with the intervention collected at baseline (pre), week 4 (mid), and week 8 (postintervention). Qualitative responses were also collected at the mid- and postintervention points. Results The findings demonstrated a sustained engagement with Purrble over the 7-week period, with the acceptability further supported by the qualitative data indicating that students accepted Purrble and that Purrble was well-integrated into their daily routines. Exploratory quantitative data analysis indicated that Purrble was associated with reductions in student anxiety (dz=0.96, 95% CI 0.62-1.29) and emotion dysregulation (dz=0.69, 95% CI 0.38-0.99), and with an increase in ER self-efficacy (dz=–0.56, 95% CI –0.86 to –0.26). Conclusions This is the first trial of a simple physical intervention that aims to provide ongoing ER support to university students. Both quantitative and qualitative data suggest that Purrble is an acceptable and feasible intervention among students, the engagement with which can be sustained at a stable level across a 7-week period while retaining a perceived benefit for those who use it (n=32, 61% of our sample). The consistency of use is particularly promising given that there was no clinician engagement or further support provided beyond Purrble being delivered to the students. These results show promise for an innovative intervention model, which could be complementary to the existing interventions.
BACKGROUND Mental health difficulties among university students have been rising rapidly over the last decade, and the demand for university mental health services commonly far exceeds available resources. Digital interventions are seen as one potential solution to these challenges. However, as in other mental health contexts, digital programmes often face low engagement and uptake; and the field lacks usable, engaging, evidence-supported mental health interventions that may be used flexibly when students need them most. OBJECTIVE The aim of this study is to investigate the feasibility and acceptability of a new, in-situ intervention tool (Purrble) among university students experiencing anxiety. As an intervention, Purrble was designed to provide in-the-moment emotion regulation support---a well-known transdiagnostic construct---directly in the moments when individuals are facing emotionally challenging situations. A secondary aim is to consider the perceived impact of Purrble on youth mental health, as reported by students over a 7-week deployment. METHODS A mixed-methods open trial was conducted, with 78 under- and post-graduate students at Oxford University. Participants were recruited based on moderate to high levels of anxiety measured by GAD-7 at baseline (M: 16.09; SD: 3.03). All participants had access to Purrble for 7 weeks during the spring term, with data on their perceived anxiety, emotion dysregulation, emotion regulation self-efficacy, and engagement with the intervention collected at baseline (pre-), week 4 (mid-), and week 8 (post-intervention). Qualitative responses were also collected at the mid- and post-intervention points. RESULTS Findings demonstrated a sustained engagement with Purrble over the 7 week period, with the acceptability further supported by the qualitative data indicating that students accepted Purrble and that Purrble was well-integrated into their daily routines. Exploratory quantitative data analysis indicated that Purrble was associated with reductions in student anxiety and emotion dysregulation, and with increases in emotion regulation self-efficacy. CONCLUSIONS This is a first trial of a simple, physical intervention that aims to provide ongoing emotion regulation support to university students. Both quantitative and qualitative data suggests that Purrble is an acceptable and feasible intervention among students, the engagement with which can be sustained at a stable level across a 7-week period, while retaining a perceived benefit for those who use it. The consistency of use is particularly promising given that there was no clinician engagement or further support provided beyond Purrble being delivered to the students. These results show promise for an innovative intervention model, which could be complementary to the existing interventions.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.