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Strengthening Health Literacy in Healthcare Workers Through Mind Body Medicine and Nutrition

Strengthening Health Literacy in Healthcare Workers Through Mind Body Medicine and Nutrition

Recruiting
18 years and older
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

This is a randomized controlled trial aiming to develop and evaluate a workplace health program to improve stress resilience and mental well-being among healthcare workers at University Medicine Essen using a participatory research design (including a steering committee composed of hospital staff, needs assessment through focus groups, and pilot testing). The intervention combines mind-body medicine techniques, complementary medicine self-care strategies, and psycho-biotic nutrition. If successful, the program will be integrated into routine workplace health management and serve as a model for other healthcare institutions.

Description

This participatory research study at University Medicine Essen aims to develop, implement, and evaluate a workplace health program to improve stress resilience and mental well-being among healthcare workers. Increasing stress, staff shortages, and high rates of sick leave negatively impact both employees and patient care, making a comprehensive and sustainable health program essential. To ensure the intervention meets employees' needs, the study is guided by a steering committee consisting of hospital staff from various departments, including occupational health management, sustainability management, reintegration services, and the nonscientific staff council. A preliminary needs assessment will be conducted through focus groups, allowing employees to provide input on key aspects such as session format, duration, and content. Furthermore, the intervention design will be tested in a pilot phase to ensure the design is feasible and accepted by the participants.

The intervention will be a multimodal program combining mind-body medicine techniques, complementary self-care, and psycho-biotic nutrition to enhance stress resilience and overall health. Mind-body medicine includes mindfulness and stress management techniques, while complementary self-care will focus on easily applicable techniques from Traditional European Medicine (TEM) and Traditional Indian Medicine (TIM). Psycho-biotic nutrition, based on the connection between gut health and mental well-being, aims to support emotional and cognitive health through dietary changes. The study will use a randomized controlled trial design, comparing an intervention group with a waitlist control group to evaluate effectiveness.

Beyond individual benefits, the study also seeks to identify workplace-level improvements by promoting mindfulness among employees and leadership regarding structural stressors. This includes optimizing communication, understanding one's thoughts and emotions, and improving workplace policies such as break structures to better support employee well-being. By integrating feedback from the needs assessment and the pilot phase, the study aims to develop a sustainable and evidence-based health program that can be incorporated into routine workplace health management at University Medicine Essen. If successful, the intervention will serve as a model for other healthcare institutions and may be implemented more broadly within the healthcare sector.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Age 18 years and older
  • Employees of University Medicine Essen
  • Moderate resilience of ≤ 144 points on the RS-25
  • Willingness to practice at home and keep a practice diary

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Insufficient German language skills
  • Pregnancy and breastfeeding
  • Severe comorbid mental disorders (e.g., substance use disorder, major depression) or other severe comorbid somatic diseases (e.g., oncological disease without remission, severe pre-existing cardiovascular disease, organ failure, other severe neurological disorders)
  • Planned or ongoing pension application (e.g., disability pension, occupational disability, reduced earning capacity, severe disability)
  • Concurrent participation in other clinical intervention studies

Study details
    Stress Resilience
    Stress
    Burnout
    Burnout Syndrome

NCT07255313

Universität Duisburg-Essen

1 February 2026

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