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Effects of a digital self-efficacy training in stressed university students: A randomized controlled trial

Psychology

Effects of a digital self-efficacy training in stressed university students: A randomized controlled trial

J. Rohde, M. A. Marciniak, et al.

Research conducted by Judith Rohde, Marta A. Marciniak, Mirka Henninger, Stephanie Homan, Anja Ries, Christina Paersch, Olivia Friedman, Adam D. Brown, and Birgit Kleim tested a one-week digital self-efficacy training prompting daily recall of mastery experiences. Compared to EMA-only control, it reduced hopelessness and trait anxiety and increased self-efficacy in stressed university students.

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Abstract
Objective: Self-efficacy is associated with positive mental health outcomes. The authors developed and tested a digital self-efficacy training focused on daily recall of autobiographical mastery experiences. Method: In a randomized controlled trial, 93 university students (mean age 23.3 years, SD 3.49) with elevated perceived stress completed either a one-week self-efficacy training combined with ecological momentary assessment (EMA) or EMA-only as an active control. Outcomes were anxiety, stress, hopelessness, hope, positive and negative affect, and self-efficacy, assessed at baseline and one day post-intervention. Results: Compared to control, the training group showed significantly reduced hopelessness and trait anxiety at post-assessment. Effects on self-efficacy at post-assessment were significant when controlling for baseline self-efficacy. Conclusions: This stand-alone digital self-efficacy training was associated with reduced hopelessness and trait anxiety and increased self-efficacy (conditional on baseline levels). Replication and examination of long-term effects and clinical implementation are warranted.
Publisher
PLOS ONE
Published On
Oct 31, 2024
Authors
Judith Rohde, Marta A. Marciniak, Mirka Henninger, Stephanie Homan, Anja Ries, Christina Paersch, Olivia Friedman, Adam D. Brown, Birgit Kleim
Tags
Self-efficacy
Digital intervention
Autobiographical mastery
Randomized controlled trial
Perceived stress
Hopelessness
Trait anxiety
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