Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2brh9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T18:35:22.790Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A feasibility study on a novel well-being intervention for university students

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 November 2021

E. Hunt*
Affiliation:
Department of Occupational Science and Occupational Therapy, University College Cork/Academic Advisor UCC Graduate Attributes Programme, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland
L. Coombes
Affiliation:
Department of Occupational Science and Occupational Therapy, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland
*
Address for correspondence: Dr E. Hunt, Department of Occupational Science and Occupational Therapy, G24, Brookfield Health Sciences Complex, UCC, College Road, Cork, Ireland. (Email: [email protected])
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Objectives:

Challenging transitions, increased stress and mental ill health can affect students’ academic performance and their capacity to remain in higher education. Prevention and early treatment of mental health problems in college students is therefore a key public health priority, nationally and internationally. Developing a range of evidence-based interventions targeting the mental health of students is critical. We examined the feasibility and acceptability of a new universal time use and well-being intervention, the ‘Everyday Matters: Healthy Habits for University Life’ digital badge (EMDB), a co-curricular micro-credential for first-year college students.

Methods:

This study used a single-arm, pre–post design for first-year undergraduate students. The EMDB comprised eight 1-hour lunchtime sessions on brain development and time-use habits across the 24 hours of the day including sleep, self-care, leisure, study and work. Validated measures of occupational competence and value, mental well-being, sleep health, mindset, self-compassion and gratitude were completed, along with an evaluation questionnaire.

Results:

Eight first-year undergraduate students completed the demographic questionnaire and pre- and post- measures, with one additional student completing only the evaluation questionnaire. There was significantly improved levels of well-being, self-compassion and growth mindset following the intervention. Many of the challenges reported by participants related to occupational issues such as managing finances and having a satisfying routine. Participants appreciated the practical relevance and scientific underpinnings of the programme content. The sense of belonging within the group and having insightful conversations with other group members were particularly valued by participants.

Conclusions:

This study offers preliminary evidence that an occupational therapy based universal time-use and well-being intervention was feasible to deliver and acceptable to first-year undergraduate students. The results of this study and the participant acceptability support further development and evaluation of the EMDB intervention.

Type
Short Report
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of College of Psychiatrists of Ireland

Introduction

Increased levels of student mental ill health, mental distress and low well-being have been reported nationally and internationally (Auerbach et al. Reference Auerbach, Mortier, Bruffaerts, Alonso, Benjet, Cuijpers, Demyttenaere, Ebert, Green, Hasking, Murray, Nock, Pinder-Amaker, Sampson, Stein, Vilagut, Zaslavsky and Kessler2018; Higher Education Authority, 2020). The transition into and through higher education is challenging for many students (Harris, Reference Harris2019; Keptner, Reference Keptner2019). College was the most frequently reported stressor for young adults in the My World 2 Survey (Dooley et al. Reference Dooley, O'Connor, Fitzgerald and O'Reilly2019). Challenging transitions, increased stress and mental ill health can affect students’ academic performance and their desire and capacity to remain in higher education (Duffy et al. Reference Duffy, Saunders, Malhi, Patten, Cipriani, McNevin, MacDonald and Geddes2019).

Prevention and early treatment of mental health problems in college students is therefore a key public health priority (Cuijpers et al. Reference Cuijpers, Auerbach, Benjet, Bruffaerts, Ebert, Karyotaki and Kessler2019). Mental health promotion, prevention and treatment in higher education are mainly facilitated through one-to-one counselling services (Brown, Reference Brown2018). However, there are significant pressures on these services, with demand exceeding supply, even though stigma around accessing mental health supports remains (Price & Smith, Reference Price and Smith2019). Developing and resourcing a range of evidence-based interventions targeting the mental health, well-being and success of students is critical (Hudziak & Tiemeier, Reference Hudziak and Tiemeier2017; Hill et al. Reference Hill, Farrelly, Clarke and Cannon2020; Worsley et al. Reference Worsley, Pennington and Corcoran2020; Long et al. Reference Long, Kennedy, Malloy Spink and Lengua2021) along the continuum of support from universal to intensive supports (Department of Health, 2020). Given that the curriculum is the only guaranteed point of contact between a university and its students (Hughes, Reference Hughes2020), curricular approaches to well-being, although complex (Ecclestone, Reference Ecclestone2019), should be considered (Houghton & Anderson, Reference Houghton and Anderson2017).

What people do every day, their time use habits and routines, impacts health and well-being and often changes significantly during times of transition (Gewurtz et al. Reference Gewurtz, Moll, Letts, Larivière, Levasseur and Krupa2016). Risks to health can arise from a lack of fit, through choice or circumstance, between daily routines and the environment in which people work, rest and play (Wilcock, Reference Wilcock1998). As both quantities and qualities of time use shape activity patterns (Hunt et al. Reference Hunt, McKay, Dahly, Fitzgerald and Perry2015), optimising patterns of everyday activities requires a good fit between the ability to participate in meaningful and necessary activities across the day and the importance of these everyday activities to the individual. Occupational strategies that facilitate successful engagement in daily activities and psychological strategies for altering patterns of thoughts and behaviours can both support successful transition (Crider et al. Reference Crider, Calder, Bunting and Forwell2015).

We report a feasibility study of a new universal time use and well-being intervention, developed by the first author. The ‘Everyday Matters: Healthy Habits for University Life’ digital badge (EMDB) is a co-curricular micro-credential designed for first-year college students at University College Cork (UCC). With the goals of supporting first-year college students, increasing their preparedness for college life and their chances of study success, participants in the EMDB are encouraged to explore some practical everyday things that they can say and do to support themselves as much as possible during this time of change and establish healthy habits and routines for their university lifestyle, enhancing their successful transition into and through higher education. The EMDB is underpinned by scientific research and theory in occupational science and occupational therapy, positive psychology and developmental neuroscience.

The main objectives of this study were to investigate the following questions:

  1. 1. What are participants’ perceived occupational competence (i.e. ability to participate in everyday activities) and occupational value (i.e. perceived importance of everyday activities) before and after the EMDB?

  2. 2. Are there differences in participants’ mental well-being, sleep health, mindset, self-compassion and gratitude before and after the EMDB?

  3. 3. What are participants' perspectives on the EMDB?

Methods

Design

This study used a single-arm (Evans, Reference Evans2010), pre–post design (Salkind, Reference Salkind2010) to explore the feasibility and acceptability of the EMDB.

Participants

The target population for the first delivery of the EMDB was first-year students from the College of Arts, Celtic Studies and Social Sciences, UCC. Information about the EMDB was made available to these students through various university digital communication channels. Thirty places were offered on a first come first served basis. Actual attendance subsequently ranged from 10 to 14 students (average weekly attendance: 11). At the first session, participants of the EMDB were invited to participate in the feasibility study. Eight students completed the demographic questionnaire and pre- and post- measures, with one additional student completing the evaluation/feedback questionnaire only.

Intervention

Over eight 1-hour lunchtime sessions and using a range of teaching and learning strategies and resources, students were guided to reflect on their own time-use habits across the 24 hours of their day including sleep, self-care, play and leisure, study and work and how these influenced their health and well-being (Hunt et al. Reference Hunt, McKay, Dahly, Fitzgerald and Perry2015; Moll et al.   Reference Moll, Gewurtz, Krupa, Law, Larivière and Levasseur2015). Habits of mind including growth mindset, self-compassion and joy and gratitude were also explored, as their presence or absence can enrich or undermine daily experiences and occupational competence. Participants learned about brain and body health and how to create and maintain daily habits and routines that support physical and emotional well-being for learning and life (Hunt, Reference Hunt2020). A comprehensive online companion resource hosted on the university’s virtual learning environment supplemented the in-person sessions. The EMDB was delivered in-person by the first author in the UCC Skills Centre, the university’s academic support centre located in the main library. The intervention was delivered in semester one 2019–2020 before the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Main outcome measures

The first research question was investigated as follows:

Occupational Self-Assessment – Short Form

Developed and validated by Popova et al. (Reference Popova, Ostrowski, Wescott and Taylor2019), the Occupational Self-Assessment – Short Form (OSA-SF) is a three-step assessment of the ability to successfully perform (occupational competence) (OSA_C) and the perceived importance (occupational value) (OSA_V) of 12 daily activities; it also identifies up to four priorities to target for improvement. Competence sub-scale and value sub-scale items are summed.

The following validated measures were chosen to investigate research question two:

Warwick–Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale

Warwick–Edinburgh mental well-being scale (WEMWBS) has been validated for the measurement of mental well-being amongst the general population (Tennant et al. Reference Tennant, Hiller, Fishwick, Platt, Joseph, Weich, Parkinson, Secker and Stewart-Brown2007). It comprises 14 positively worded statements with five response categories ranging from ‘none of the time’ to ‘all of the time’.

RU_SATED Questionnaire (v2.0)

The RU_SATED scale (Ravyts et al. Reference Ravyts, Dzierzewski, Perez, Donovan and Dautovich2021) assesses six key dimensions of sleep that have been consistently associated with health outcomes. These dimensions are regularity of sleep; satisfaction with sleep; alertness during waking hours; timing of sleep; sleep efficiency and sleep duration. Items are each rated on a 3-point Likert scale from 0 (Rarely/Never) to 2 (Usually/Always) and totalled, with higher scores indicating better sleep health.

Revised Implicit Theories of Intelligence (Self-Theory) Scale

The Revised Implicit Theories of Intelligence (Self-Theory) Scale (RITIS; De Castella & Byrne, Reference De Castella and Byrne2015) explores students’ beliefs about their personal ability to change their intelligence level. It comprises eight statements, each of which reflects a first-person claim about the extent to which intelligence is fixed or malleable, with responses on a 6-point scale from strongly disagree to strongly agree. Lower total scores indicate a stronger growth mindset. The RITIS shows good construct validity (De Castella & Byrne, Reference De Castella and Byrne2015).

Self-Compassion Scale – Short Form

The 12-item Self-Compassion Scale – Short Form (SCS–SF; Neff, Reference Neff2011) offers an economical alternative to the long self-compassion scale to measure self-compassion. The SCS-SF has been validated for use by Raes et al. (Reference Raes, Pommier, Neff and Gucht2011). Items are rated on a five-point response scale ranging from 1 (almost never) to 5 (almost always), yielding a total score with higher values indicating higher self-compassion.

The Gratitude Questionnaire-6

The GQ-6 is a six-item self-report questionnaire designed to assess individual differences in the proneness to experience gratitude in daily life. Respondents endorse each item on a 7-point Likert-type scale (McCullough et al. Reference McCullough, Emmons and Tsang2002). Higher total scores indicate a greater inclination towards experiencing gratitude in daily life.

Participants' perspectives on the EMDB (research question three) were investigated with an evaluation/feedback questionnaire comprising a 12-item closed response section where participants rated their satisfaction with different elements of the programme (e.g. quality of content, duration of the programme, facilitator’s knowledge) along a scale from 1 to 10. Four open-ended questions were also asked: What was the best part of the programme for you? Was there any part that did not work so well? What would make the Everyday Matters digital badge better? Have you any other comments or feedback?

Demographic data were gathered alongside the pre-intervention measures, as described in Table 1.

Table 1. Demographic information (N = 8)

Procedure

Pre- and post- paper outcome measures were completed in session one and session eight, respectively. Anonymity was ensured by using a code chosen by each participant to enable the researcher to match pre- and post- questionnaires.

Analysis

Numerical data were entered into SPSS v27 (IBM Corp, 2020). Descriptive statistics were used for the demographic information and the satisfaction component of the evaluation/feedback questionnaire. The number of positive and negative responses to each of the open-ended feedback questions was tabulated. Not all participants completed all outcome measure items. The number of participants who completed each question ranged from 5 to 8. Where total scores were available, paired sample t-tests and non-parametric related sample sign tests were used to determine if there was a significant difference in mean/median scores on outcome measures pre- and post-intervention.

Results

Table 1 presents demographic information on the participants. Mean satisfaction levels with the relevance of the programme content to their life, quality of weekly session content, supplementary resources, facilitator’s knowledge and skills in delivering the sessions ranged from 94% to 99%.

Occupational competence and occupational value before and after the EMDB

In the pre-test OSA-SF, participants reported having particular difficulty with identifying and solving problems, working towards goals and having a satisfying routine. All who responded (n = 7) reported having a lot of difficulty with ‘having a satisfying routine’. Areas of particular importance to participants included ‘working towards my goals’, ‘making decisions based on what I think is important’ and ‘effectively using their abilities’. Participants identified ‘having a satisfying routine’ and ‘handling their responsibilities’ as priority areas to target for improvement.

Of the eight who completed the OSA-SF post EMDB, six reported having difficulty ‘taking care of myself’, four reported having difficulty ‘managing finances’ and five reported having difficulty with ‘having a satisfying routine’. Good occupational performance was reported in these areas: ‘getting where I need to go’, ‘handling my responsibilities’, ‘being involved as a student/worker/volunteer/family member’, ‘making decisions based on what I think is important’ and ‘effectively using my abilities’. Daily activities identified as important included ‘taking care of myself’, ‘getting things done that they need to do’, ‘having a satisfying routine’, ‘handling my responsibilities’, ‘working towards my goals’, ‘making decisions based on what I think is important’ and ‘effectively using my abilities’. The most common highlighted priority area for improvement, identified by three out of the six who responded, was ‘working towards my goals’. Median occupational competence scores increased from 27 to 34 while median occupational value scores increased slightly from 25 to 27 (Table 2a).

Table 2a. Differences in median scores pre- and post- EMDB (related samples sign tests)

* p ≤ 0.05.

** Reduction in RITIS score represents a stronger growth mindset.

Table 2b. Difference in mean scores pre- and post-EMDB (paired sample t-tests)

SD, standard deviation.

* p ≤ 0.05.

Mental well-being, sleep health, mindset, self-compassion and gratitude before and after the EMDB

Mean scores in the WEMWBS (Table 2b) increased significantly from 40 to 47.38 (p = 0.01), showing increased overall sense of well-being amongst participants, whilst RU_SATED scores dropped slightly from a median of 8 to 7. RITIS scores indicated a significant strengthening of growth mindset amongst participants (p = 0.03). Self-compassion scores significantly increased from baseline to follow-up (p = 0.006), while gratitude scores improved slightly.

Discussion

This study offers preliminary evidence that an occupational therapy based universal time-use and well-being intervention was feasible to deliver and acceptable to first-year undergraduate students. Statistically significant results were found relating to improved levels of self-compassion, growth mindset and overall well-being amongst participants. These findings are encouraging, given the wide-ranging health benefits associated with self-compassion and growth mindset for college students (Smeets et al. Reference Smeets, Neff, Alberts and Peters2014; Paunesku et al. Reference Paunesku, Walton, Romero, Smith, Yeager and Dweck2015; Gedik, Reference Gedik2019). There was a deterioration in sleep health measured by the RU_SATED in the post-test. This could be related to the post-test being administered close to examinations at the end of the semester.

In 2017/2018, 93% of full-time undergraduate new entrants to higher education in Ireland were aged 17–24 years, with the majority aged 19 years (Higher Education Authority, 2018). However, only half of the participants in the EMDB were aged 18–24 years. The sample had a greater representation of older students and students who had previously completed a post-secondary course. By definition, these students had more academic and life experience and yet still self-selected to engage in and complete the EMDB. Further delivery of the EMBD with larger first year cohorts will allow for more robust sub-group analysis of the experiences and outcomes amongst different age groups within the first year cohort.

Many of the challenges reported by participants related to occupational issues such as managing finances, having a satisfying routine and taking care of oneself. Whilst not statistically significant, there were improvements with regard to perceived occupational competence and value for occupations. Satisfaction with performance in daily occupations may be related to adjustment in university (Keptner, Reference Keptner2019). However, changes in living situations, employment status and curricular demands require ongoing adjustments during the college years (Keptner, Reference Keptner2017) and so it is possible that OSA-SF scores may increase or decrease. Equipping students with the knowledge and transferable skills to adapt daily routines and patterns of thought may enable them to engage in a daily round of activities that enhance their health and meet the evolving demands of college life.

Knoesen and Naudé (Reference Knoesen and Naudé2017) and Harris (Reference Harris2019) amongst others highlight the need for support when adjusting to university life, not only in relation to academics but practically, environmentally and socially, on an ongoing basis. With their expertise in daily activities and well-being (Gewurtz et al. Reference Gewurtz, Moll, Letts, Larivière, Levasseur and Krupa2016), occupational therapists are well placed to provide this support (Spencer et al. Reference Spencer, Sherman, Nielsen and Thormodson2017; Royal College of Occupational Therapists, 2018; Keptner & McCarthy, Reference Keptner and McCarthy2020; Hunt, Reference Hunt2021).

Participant feedback was overwhelmingly positive. Participants appreciated the practical relevance and scientific underpinnings of the programme content. The sense of belonging within the group and having insightful conversations with other group members were particularly valued by participants. Creating cultures and experiences on campus that support belonging is increasingly recognised as key to student success (Baldwin et al. Reference Baldwin, Bunting, Daugherty, Lewis and Steenbergh2020). Situating the EMDB intervention as a well-being programme for learning and life offered within mainstream rather than health or disability services may have increased its accessibility, appeal and the experience of belonging for participants.

Limitations

By its nature, this feasibility study was limited in sample size and therefore underpowered. Given this was a pilot study, the researchers cannot outrule the impact of biases such as selection bias, observation bias and confirmation bias (Keptner, Reference Keptner2017). Nevertheless, the results are encouraging and support further development and evaluation of the EMDB intervention (Medical Research Council, 2008).

Acknowledgements

The authors extend their thanks to the EMDB participants for sharing their perspectives; UCC Skills Centre staff Kathy Bradley and Yasmine Radwan for their administrative assistance with delivering the EMDB; Deirdre O’ Connor for her assistance in preparing the manuscript for submission and to the reviewers whose thoughtful comments strengthened the paper.

Conflicts of interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

Ethical standards

The authors assert that all procedures contributing to this work comply with the ethical standards of the relevant national and institutional committee on human experimentation with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2008. The authors assert that ethical approval for publication of this feasibility study has been provided by the Social Research Ethics Committee in University College Cork. Written informed consent was obtained from all study participants.

Financial support

This research received no specific grant from any funding agency, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.

References

Auerbach, RP, Mortier, P, Bruffaerts, R, Alonso, J, Benjet, C, Cuijpers, P, Demyttenaere, K, Ebert, DD, Green, JG, Hasking, P, Murray, E, Nock, MK, Pinder-Amaker, S, Sampson, NA, Stein, DJ, Vilagut, G, Zaslavsky, AM, Kessler, RC, WHO WMH-ICS Collaborators (2018). WHO world mental health surveys international college student project: prevalence and distribution of mental disorders. Journal of Abnormal Psychology 127, 623638.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Baldwin, A, Bunting, B, Daugherty, D, Lewis, L, Steenbergh, T (2020). Promoting Belonging, Growth Mindset, and Resilience to Foster Student Success. University of South Carolina/National Resource Center for the First Year Experience & Students in Transition: Columbia, SC.Google Scholar
Brown, JSL (2018). Student mental health: some answers and more questions. Journal of Mental Health 27, 193196.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Crider, C, Calder, CR, Bunting, KL, Forwell, S (2015). An integrative review of occupational science and theoretical literature exploring transition. Journal of Occupational Science 22(3), 304319. DOI: 10.1080/14427591.2014.922913.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cuijpers, P, Auerbach, RP, Benjet, C, Bruffaerts, R, Ebert, D, Karyotaki, E, Kessler, RC (2019). The World Health Organization world mental health international college student initiative: an overview. International Journal of Methods in Psychiatric Research 28, 16.Google ScholarPubMed
De Castella, K, Byrne, D (2015). My intelligence may be more malleable than yours: the revised implicit theories of intelligence (self-theory) scale is a better predictor of achievement, motivation, and student disengagement. European Journal of Psychology of Education 30, 245267.Google Scholar
Department of Health (2020). Sharing the vision: a mental health policy for everyone (https://www.gov.ie/en/publication/2e46f-sharing-the-vision-a-mental-health-policy-for-everyone/). Accessed 29 April 2021.Google Scholar
Dooley, B, O'Connor, C, Fitzgerald, A, O'Reilly, A (2019). My world survey 2: national study of youth mental health in Ireland. Dublin: UCD and Jigsaw. http://myworldsurvey.ie/.Google Scholar
Duffy, A, Saunders, KEA, Malhi, GS, Patten, S, Cipriani, A, McNevin, SH, MacDonald, E, Geddes, J (2019). Mental health care for university students: a way forward? The Lancet Psychiatry 6, 885887.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ecclestone, K (2019). The relationship between well-being, mental health and pedagogy. Summary of workshop for the SMaRteN project (https://www.smarten.org.uk/uploads/1/2/0/8/120879546/smarten_pedagogy_workshop_july_10th_2019_final_version_8th_august_2019_.docx). Accessed 29 April 2021.Google Scholar
Evans, SR (2010). Clinical trial structures. Journal of Experimental Stroke & Translational Medicine 3, 818.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gedik, Z (2019). Self-compassion and health-promoting lifestyle behaviors in college students. Psychology, Health & Medicine 24, 108114.Google ScholarPubMed
Gewurtz, RE, Moll, SE, Letts, LJ, Larivière, N, Levasseur, M, Krupa, TM (2016). What you do every day matters: a new direction for health promotion. Canadian Journal of Public Health 107, 205208.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harris, A (2019). Finding our own way: mental health and moving from school to further and higher education (https://www.centreformentalhealth.org.uk/sites/default/files/2019-01/CentreforMH_FindingOurOwnWay.pdf). Accessed 29 April 2021.Google Scholar
Higher Education Authority (2018). Age of all full-time undergraduate new entrants at 1 January 2018 in all HEA-funded institutions. https://hea.ie/statistics-archive/.Google Scholar
Higher Education Authority (2020). National student mental health and suicide prevention framework (https://hea.ie/policy/policy-development/mental-health-framework/). Accessed 29 April 2021.Google Scholar
Hill, M, Farrelly, N, Clarke, C, Cannon, M (2020). Student mental health and well-being: overview and future directions. Irish Journal of Psychological Medicine 27, 18.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Houghton, AM, Anderson, J (2017). Embedding Mental Wellbeing in the Curriculum: Maximising Success in Higher Education. New York: Higher Education Academy.Google Scholar
Hudziak, JJ, Tiemeier, GL (2017). Neuroscience-inspired, behavioral change program for university students. Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Clinics of North America 26, 381394.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hughes, G (2020). Supporting student wellbeing through curriculum design and delivery (https://lta.hw.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/Guide-NO20_Supporting-Student-Wellbeing-Through-Curriculum-Design-and-Delivery.pdf). Accessed 29 April 2021.Google Scholar
Hunt, E (2020). Everyday Matters – healthy habits for college students (https://thriveglobal.com/stories/everyday-matters-healthy-habits-for-college-students/). Accessed 29 April 2021.Google Scholar
Hunt, E. (Ed.) (2021). Showcasing a tiered public health Occupational Therapy approach to supporting student participation, health, wellbeing and success in higher education. National Forum for the Enhancement of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education https://bit.ly/3tHgpwJ.Google Scholar
Hunt, E, McKay, EA, Dahly, DL, Fitzgerald, AP, Perry, IJ (2015). A person-centred analysis of the time-use, daily activities and health-related quality of life of Irish school-going late adolescents. Quality of Life Research 24, 13031315.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
IBM Corp (2020). IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows, Version 27.0. IBM Corp: Armonk, NY.Google Scholar
Keptner, KM (2017). Long-term follow-up of an occupation-based group addressing occupational performance and satisfaction in University Freshmen. Occupational Therapy in Mental Health 33, 308325.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keptner, KM (2019). Relationship between occupational performance measures and adjustment in a sample of university students. Journal of Occupational Science 26, 617.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keptner, KM, McCarthy, K (2020). Mapping occupational therapy practice with postsecondary students: a scoping review. The Open Journal of Occupational Therapy 8, 117.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knoesen, R, Naudé, L (2017). Experiences of flourishing and languishing during the first-year at university. Journal of Mental Health 27, 269278.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Long, R, Kennedy, M, Malloy Spink, K, Lengua, LJ (2021). eEvaluation of the implementation of a well-being promotion program for college students. Frontiers in Psychiatry 12, 112.Google Scholar
McCullough, ME, Emmons, RA, Tsang, JA (2002). The grateful disposition: a conceptual and empirical topography. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 82, 112127.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Medical Research Council (2008). Developing and evaluating complex interventions: new guidance (www.mrc.ac.uk/complexinterventionguidance). Accessed 20 September 2010.Google Scholar
Moll, SE, Gewurtz, RE, Krupa, TM, Law, MC, Larivière, N, Levasseur, M (2015). “Do-Live-Well”: a Canadian framework for promoting occupation, health, and well-being. Canadian Journal of Occupational Therapy 82, 923. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0008417414545981.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Neff, K (2011). Scales for researchers: self compassion (https://self-compassion.org/self-compassion-scales-for-researchers/). Accessed 23 April 2021.Google Scholar
Paunesku, D, Walton, GM, Romero, CL, Smith, EN, Yeager, DS, Dweck, CS (2015). Mindset interventions are a scalable treatment for academic underachievement. Psychological Science 26, 784793.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Popova, ES, Ostrowski, RK, Wescott, J, Taylor, RR (2019). Development and validation of the Occupational Self-Assessment-Short Form (OSA-SF). American Journal of Occupational Therapy 73, 110.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Price, A, Smith, HA (2019). Union of Students in Ireland National Report on Student Mental Health (https://usi.ie/mentalhealthreport/). Accessed 23 April 2021.Google Scholar
Raes, F, Pommier, E, Neff, KD, Gucht, DV (2011). Construction and factorial validation of a short form of the Self-Compassion Scale. Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy 18, 250255. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21584907/.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ravyts, SG, Dzierzewski, JM, Perez, EN, Donovan, EK, Dautovich, ND (2021). Sleep health as measured by RU SATED: a psychometric evaluation. Behavioral Sleep Medicine 19, 4856.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Royal College of Occupational Therapists (2018). Getting my life back: occupational therapy promoting mental health and wellbeing in England (https://www.rcot.co.uk/sites/default/files/Getting-my-life-back_England.pdf). Accessed 23 April 2021.Google Scholar
Salkind, NJ (2010). Encyclopaedia of Research Design, vol. 1-10. SAGE Publications, Inc: Thousand Oaks, CA.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smeets, E, Neff, K, Alberts, H, Peters, M (2014). Meeting suffering with kindness: effects of a brief self-compassion intervention for female college students. Journal of Clinical Psychology 70, 794807.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Spencer, B, Sherman, L, Nielsen, S, Thormodson, K (2017). Effectiveness of occupational therapy interventions for students with mental illness transitioning to higher education: a systematic review. Occupational Therapy in Mental Health 34, 151164.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tennant, R, Hiller, L, Fishwick, R, Platt, S, Joseph, S, Weich, S, Parkinson, J, Secker, J, Stewart-Brown, S (2007). The Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale (WEMWBS): development and UK validation. Health and Quality of Life Outcomes 5, 63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilcock, AA (1998). An Occupational Perspective of Health. Slack Inc: Thorofare, NJ.Google Scholar
Worsley, J, Pennington, A, Corcoran, R (2020). What interventions improve college and university students’ mental health and wellbeing? A review of review-level evidence (https://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/3089948/1/Student-mental-health-full-review%202020.pdf). Accessed 29 April 2021.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1. Demographic information (N = 8)

Figure 1

Table 2a. Differences in median scores pre- and post- EMDB (related samples sign tests)

Figure 2

Table 2b. Difference in mean scores pre- and post-EMDB (paired sample t-tests)