Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04330352

Mindfulness-based "STOP (Stop, Take a Breath, Observe, Proceed) Touching Your Face" Intervention

"STOP Touching Your Face": a Randomized Controlled Trial of Brief Mindfulness-based Intervention

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
1,094 (actual)
Sponsor
Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

This single-blind, randomized, controlled, trial is to assess the efficasy of a brief mindfulness-based "STOP touching your face" training program to reduce or avoid face-touching to low people's chances of catching infectious diseases like COVID-19.

Detailed description

Background Face-touching behavior often happens frequently and automatically, and poses potential risk for spreading infectious disease. Mindfulness-based interventions (MBIs) have shown its efficacy in the treatment of behavior disorders. This study aims to evaluate an online mindfulness-based brief intervention skill named "STOP (Stop, Take a Breath, Observe, Proceed) touching your face" in reducing face-touching behavior. Methods This will be a single-blind, randomized, controlled, trial. We will recruit 1,000 participants, and will randomize and allocate participants 1:1 to the "STOP touching your face" intervention group (n=500) and the control group (n=500). All participants will be asked to monitor and record their face-touching behavior. The intervention group will receive the brief online mindfulness-based "STOP touching your face" program, and the control group will receive control intervention. Primary outcome will be the efficacy of short-term mindfulness-based "STOP touching your face" intervention for reducing the frequency of face-touching. The secondary outcomes will be the reduction of the duration of face-touching after intervention; the correlation between the psychological traits of mindfulness and face-touching behavior; and the differences of face-touching behavior between left-handers and right-handers. We will recruit 1000 participants from April to June 2020 or until the recruitment process is complete. The follow-up will be completed in June 2020. We expect all trial results to be available by the end of June 2020. Discussion This is the first RCT to evaluate the efficacy of brief mindfulness intervention to reduce face-touching behavior. We expect that "STOP touching your face" has a significantly greater reduction the frequency of face-touching behavior than the control intervention. As "STOP touching your face" is a brief and simple skill, the public health impact of its expansion world-wide could be enormous, helping us to manage any face-touching spread infectious diseases, like Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALMindfulness-based "STOP touching your face" practice1\. Remind yourself to STOP. Whatever you are doing in this moment (e.g. touching your month, pinching your nose, rubbing your eyes, resting your chin on your hands), pause for a minute. 2. Take a deep breath. This reconnects you with your body. Pay attention to your breathing and just allow yourself to continue to breathe normally and naturally. 3. Observe what is happening for you in this moment-including thoughts, feelings, and emotions (e.g. feel distracted, anxious or nervous?). What do you notice in your body (e.g. feel itchy or tingling on any part of your face)? You can be aware of anything: posture, sensations, tension in your body, or, once again, your breath. You might notice the sound around you. You might even notice your thoughts or emotions. 4. Proceed with whatever you were doing before you came to a STOP or something that you want to do in the moment (e.g. proceed with touching your face, or stop face-touching and take an alternative behavior).

Timeline

Start date
2020-04-02
Primary completion
2020-07-02
Completion
2020-07-02
First posted
2020-04-01
Last updated
2020-09-30

Locations

1 site across 1 country: China

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04330352. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.