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Thinking, Feeling, Behaving: Using the MINDBODYSTRONG ® Intervention to Improve Nurse Well-being Using a Virtual Format.
J Nurs Adm. 2023 Jun 01; 53(6):337-343.JN

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

This study examined the impact of the MINDBODYSTRONG ® program on mental health and lifestyle behaviors among a sample of staff nurses, clinical nurse leaders, and faculty, when offered after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.

BACKGROUND

Previous studies have demonstrated the MINDBODYSTRONG program decreased anxiety and depressive symptoms, improved job satisfaction, and sustained healthy lifestyle behaviors in newly licensed RNs. This program has not been studied with experienced nurses. In addition, the use of a virtual format is unique.

METHODS

A pre-post design was used for this pilot study. Subjects were recruited from a large Midwestern medical center and affiliated school of nursing. Registered participants of the MINDBODYSTRONG program attended 7 weekly sessions virtually.

RESULTS

The MINDBODYSTRONG intervention suggests sustained improvement in perceived stress, anxiety, depression, and use of healthy behaviors.

CONCLUSION

This pilot study supports that the MINDBODYSTRONG program may be effective in addressing mental health and healthy lifestyle beliefs for staff nurses, clinical nurse leaders, and nursing faculty.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Author Affiliations: Clinical Associate Professor (Dr Price), Clinical Assistant Professor (Dr Macera-DiClemente), Clinical Instructor (Dr Wintermeyer-Pingel), Director of Undergraduate Studies (Dr Riley), and Associate Dean of Undergraduate Studies (Dr Tschannen), University of Michigan School of Nursing; and Nurse Leader for Wellbeing (Figueroa), Office of Workplace Resilience, University of Michigan Health, Ann Arbor.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

37184457

Citation

Price, Deborah M., et al. "Thinking, Feeling, Behaving: Using the MINDBODYSTRONG ® Intervention to Improve Nurse Well-being Using a Virtual Format." The Journal of Nursing Administration, vol. 53, no. 6, 2023, pp. 337-343.
Price DM, Figueroa N, Macera-DiClemente L, et al. Thinking, Feeling, Behaving: Using the MINDBODYSTRONG ® Intervention to Improve Nurse Well-being Using a Virtual Format. J Nurs Adm. 2023;53(6):337-343.
Price, D. M., Figueroa, N., Macera-DiClemente, L., Wintermeyer-Pingel, S., Riley, P., & Tschannen, D. (2023). Thinking, Feeling, Behaving: Using the MINDBODYSTRONG ® Intervention to Improve Nurse Well-being Using a Virtual Format. The Journal of Nursing Administration, 53(6), 337-343. https://doi.org/10.1097/NNA.0000000000001293
Price DM, et al. Thinking, Feeling, Behaving: Using the MINDBODYSTRONG ® Intervention to Improve Nurse Well-being Using a Virtual Format. J Nurs Adm. 2023 Jun 1;53(6):337-343. PubMed PMID: 37184457.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Thinking, Feeling, Behaving: Using the MINDBODYSTRONG ® Intervention to Improve Nurse Well-being Using a Virtual Format. AU - Price,Deborah M, AU - Figueroa,Nicole, AU - Macera-DiClemente,Linda, AU - Wintermeyer-Pingel,Sue, AU - Riley,Penny, AU - Tschannen,Dana, Y1 - 2023/05/12/ PY - 2023/5/25/medline PY - 2023/5/15/pubmed PY - 2023/5/15/entrez SP - 337 EP - 343 JF - The Journal of nursing administration JO - J Nurs Adm VL - 53 IS - 6 N2 - OBJECTIVE: This study examined the impact of the MINDBODYSTRONG ® program on mental health and lifestyle behaviors among a sample of staff nurses, clinical nurse leaders, and faculty, when offered after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. BACKGROUND: Previous studies have demonstrated the MINDBODYSTRONG program decreased anxiety and depressive symptoms, improved job satisfaction, and sustained healthy lifestyle behaviors in newly licensed RNs. This program has not been studied with experienced nurses. In addition, the use of a virtual format is unique. METHODS: A pre-post design was used for this pilot study. Subjects were recruited from a large Midwestern medical center and affiliated school of nursing. Registered participants of the MINDBODYSTRONG program attended 7 weekly sessions virtually. RESULTS: The MINDBODYSTRONG intervention suggests sustained improvement in perceived stress, anxiety, depression, and use of healthy behaviors. CONCLUSION: This pilot study supports that the MINDBODYSTRONG program may be effective in addressing mental health and healthy lifestyle beliefs for staff nurses, clinical nurse leaders, and nursing faculty. SN - 1539-0721 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/37184457/Thinking_Feeling_Behaving:_Using_the_MINDBODYSTRONG_®_Intervention_to_Improve_Nurse_Well_being_Using_a_Virtual_Format_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -