Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01599624

Stress Resilience Training System

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
68 (actual)
Sponsor
United States Naval Medical Center, San Diego · Federal
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The Stress Resilience Training System (SRTS) program is a stress reduction and resilience building system that blends cognitive training to anticipate the effects of stress with advanced biofeedback to mitigate stress effects and aftereffects, using a game-based learning framework on an iPad platform. The proposed study will evaluate the effectiveness of the SRTS program at reducing perceived stress, PTSD symptoms, depression, anxiety, sleep quality, coping, attrition and class/operational performance among United States Navy service members.

Detailed description

Military operations and training situations present many physical and psychological challenges for service members to adapt to and overcome. The challenges of these changing conditions necessitate having to cope with stress, which is seen as the negative perceptions, feelings, and emotions that manifest from the subjective physical and/or mental strain on life processes. In addition, service members are returning from deployments having gone through traumatic experiences that can develop into posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression or other serious conditions. In an increasing number of military personnel, the adverse effects of service and particularly of stressful combat exposure are significant, long lasting and possibly fatal. Most stress research is focused on treatment, but because stress effects are liable to appear years after exposure, it is imperative that methodologies be developed to mitigate the adverse effects of military-related stress and prevent its post-exposure effects. It has long been accepted that warfighters adapt to combat stress after the first few experiences and that training can help duplicate this process, with recent studies showing that experienced military personnel are able to control and even utilize stress productively. A key part of what experienced personnel learn is self-awareness of their stress state and self-regulation of stress energy in order to maintain or even improve performance. These skills can be greatly enhanced by combining cognitive learning methodologies grounded in learning theory and biofeedback techniques based on Heart Rate Variability (HRV) with innovative simulation and game-based training tools. The Stress Resilience Training System (SRTS) program is a stress reduction and resilience building system that blends cognitive training to anticipate the effects of stress with advanced biofeedback to mitigate stress effects and aftereffects, using a game-based learning framework on an iPad platform. The proposed study will evaluate the effectiveness of the SRTS program at reducing perceived stress, PTSD symptoms, depression, anxiety, sleep quality, coping, attrition and class/operational performance among United States Navy service members.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALStress Resilience Training System (SRTS)SRTS training provides both cognitive learning and training in a scientifically-designed stress resilience training approach designed to minimize the adverse effects of stress and also enhance its positive effects. In summary, the SRTS training comprises: (1) Cognitive rules and mental exercises based on expert knowledge and research; (2) Biofeedback stress control exercises based on proven HRV (Heart Rate Variability) algorithms developed by the Institute of HeartMath; and (3) E-Learning presentation of games and simulations to motivate younger trainees. The training is designed to familiarize participants with the iPad and the SRTS program. Participants will be told how to use the system and how often to use the system. SRTS program participants will each be assigned an iPad to take home with them and practice the techniques for a period of two months.
BEHAVIORALProgressive Muscle Relaxation (PMR)Progressive muscle relaxation is the systematic tensing and relaxing of 16 different muscle groups, starting with one's toes and ending with one's head (Jacobson, 1938; Conrad \& Roth, 2007). PMR users are instructed to inhale as they tense the muscles and exhale as they release the tension. Participants will participate in a two-hour PMR training. PMR participants will be given iPADs with a video recording that guides the user through working each muscle group while instructing them to focus on positive thoughts and feelings and breathing techniques. PMR program participants will each be assigned an iPad to take home with them and practice the techniques for a period of two months.

Timeline

Start date
2012-10-01
Primary completion
2015-05-01
Completion
2015-05-01
First posted
2012-05-16
Last updated
2016-08-19

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01599624. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.