Beauchemin James D
James D. Beauchemin, PhD, LCSW, is assistant professor, School of Social Work, Boise State University, 1910 University Drive, Boise, ID 83725; e-mail:
Health Soc Work. 2018 May 1;43(2):94-100. doi: 10.1093/hsw/hly007.
Heightened stress levels and compromised well-being are common among college students. Current trends on college campuses include an increase in the number of students experiencing mental health issues and an increase in students seeking help, illustrating a need for evidence-based brief interventions that improve student wellness. This research study used a randomized controlled study design to examine the effects of a short-term (seven-week), solution-focused wellness intervention on perceived stress and wellness of college students. Repeated measures analysis of variance results demonstrated that the effect of group membership across time was significant for both perceived wellness and stress (p < .01). Effect sizes using partial eta2 statistics were large for both outcome variables. Findings indicate that a brief solution-focused wellness intervention can significantly improve perceptions of wellness and reduce stress among college students and is more effective than treatment as usual. Intervention replicability allows for dissemination across varied academic groups and locations, and potential generalization across populations.
压力水平升高和幸福感受损在大学生中很常见。当前大学校园的趋势包括经历心理健康问题的学生数量增加以及寻求帮助的学生增多,这表明需要有基于证据的简短干预措施来改善学生的健康状况。本研究采用随机对照研究设计,以检验短期(七周)、以解决问题为导向的健康干预对大学生感知压力和健康状况的影响。重复测量方差分析结果表明,群体成员身份随时间的影响在感知健康和压力方面均具有显著性(p < .01)。使用偏 eta2 统计量的效应大小对于两个结果变量均较大。研究结果表明,简短的以解决问题为导向的健康干预可以显著改善大学生对健康的认知并减轻压力,且比常规治疗更有效。干预的可重复性使得其能够在不同学术群体和地点进行推广,并且有可能在不同人群中得到广泛应用。