Project STRIVE (STudents RIsing Above) - Offsetting the Health and Mental Health Costs of Resilience
University of California, Los Angeles
Summary
Students who 'strive' to rise above significant stressors to achieve academic success are considered 'resilient'. However, youths' resilience in one domain (i.e. academic) can come at a cost in other domains including physical and mental health morbidities that are under-identified and under-treated. Previous research suggests that individuals from populations experiencing documented health disparities who exhibit a "striving persistent behavioral style" in the face of stress evince later health morbidities. Ironically, the same self-regulatory skills that promote academic achievement amid chronic stress can also result in physiological dysregulation that harms health and mental health. Self-regulatory processes that involve emotion suppression, experiential avoidance, and unmodulated perseverance can culminate in allostatic load which fuels health disparities and internalizing symptoms of depression and anxiety. The proposed mechanistic trial will utilize mindfulness training to permit examination of questions about the causal role of emotion regulation strategies linked to the striving persistent behavioral style in driving mental health and health morbidities among individuals from populations experiencing documented health disparities. The proposed Project STRIVE (STudents RIsing aboVE) will identify students who are academically resilient in the face of stress and will offer a tailored mindfulness intervention targeting self-regulation processes as a putative mechanism to interrupt the links between the striving persistent behavioral style and negative health outcomes. Investigators propose a multisite randomized trial randomizing 504 high achieving Black, Latinx, or Asian America/Pacific Islander students in 18 schools to receive a mindfulness intervention or an attention control condition focused on study skills. The study will: (1) test the effects of the STRIVE intervention on putative self-regulation mechanisms (emotion suppression, experiential avoidance, and unmodulated perseverance) among identified students, (2) test the effects of the STRIVE intervention on health and mental health outcomes at 12-month post-treatment, including biomarkers of allostatic load (cortisol, blood pressure, body-mass-index, waist/hip/neck circumference), health complaints, and internalizing symptoms, and (3) examine the mechanistic model linking striving persistent behavioral style and health outcomes within the STRIVE trial.
Description
The STRIVE and SOAR interventions will be trialed with students participating in public high schools with eligible students over 3 academic school years. Eligible students in participating schools will be randomized to either the SOAR curriculum or the STRIVE intervention. Students receiving the SOAR program will be delivered an academic skills curriculum (i.e., goal setting, organization and time-management, study and test-taking skills) to help them manage school-related demands. Students receiving the STRIVE intervention will receive a tailored mindfulness-based intervention that frames the…
Eligibility
- Age range
- 13+ years
- Sex
- All
- Healthy volunteers
- Yes
Inclusion Criteria: * Enrolled in 10th or 11th grade at a participating high school * Black, Latinx, Asian American/Pacific Islander, or American Indian/Alaskan Native * High achieving (e.g., GPA above 3.5 and/or in the top 20% of their grade, enrolled in advanced classes such as AP/IB/honors classes) Exclusion Criteria: * Intellectual Disability
Interventions
- BehavioralSTRIVE
The STRIVE intervention will include all activities and BREATHE skill training components of L2B with content framed within the needs of high achieving college-bound students who can benefit from health promoting practices to offset the costs of resilience. The intervention will include twelve 60-minute group sessions, with two sessions on each of the six core themes. Each session will include an opening mindful movement, short didactic presentation of the topic or theme of that week, group activities that illustrate the theme, guided discussion about the activity, and in-session group mindfulness meditation practice.
- BehavioralStudy Skills
The sessions will focus on goal setting (4 sessions), organization and time management (3 sessions), and study skills for reading comprehension, writing papers, note-taking, and test-taking (4 sessions). Parallel to the final L2B session, the last meeting will include activities to share and reflect on how students plan to incorporate and sustain new skills.
Location
- University of CaliforniaLos Angeles, California