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ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT06598540
NA

Comparison of Two Nutrition-Based Interventions on Physician Well-being

Sponsor: Stanford University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Several studies have shown that self-valuation (also known as self-compassion) strongly predicts burnout in physicians. Although effective, existing self-compassion cultivation programs designed for physicians have significant time commitments and, historically, have had low physician participation rates. With occupational burnout among US physicians at an all-time high, there is a compelling and urgent need to identify pragmatic approaches to address low levels of self-valuation in physicians. This study aims to test the impact of a brief mindset intervention that frames daily food choices as an opportunity to demonstrate self-kindness on self-valuation and burnout in physicians over 6 weeks. Instilling a mindset shift that enables physicians to practice self-valuation as part of their existing, daily routine amidst extreme time pressures is a pragmatic and potentially powerful vehicle to promote self-valuation for physicians.

Official title: Comparison of Two Nutrition-Based Interventions on Physician Well-being - A Randomized Controlled Trial

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

21 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

177

Start Date

2025-03-15

Completion Date

2025-07-20

Last Updated

2025-06-24

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Kindness-focused

This mindset intervention frames food choices as an opportunity to practice self-kindness. Individuals randomized to this arm will participate in a 15-20-minute live virtual educational session delivered via the Stanford Zoom platform. The recording of the session will be available for 7 days on a private and secure educational web-based platform. After participating in the initial educational session, participants will have the option to engage in brief (less than 10-minute) web-based activities on their own time during weeks 2 and 5. Examples of such activities include sharing their experiences about considering food choices as an act of self-kindness with other study participants or writing an encouraging letter to a study participant and physician colleague through the private and secure message board of a web-based educational platform.

BEHAVIORAL

Health-focused

Brief education intervention framing food choices as a component of a healthy lifestyle. Individuals randomized to this arm will participate in a 15-20-minute live virtual educational session. The recording of the session will be available for 7 days on a private and secure educational web-based platform. After participating in the initial educational session, participants will have the option to engage in brief (less than 10-minute) web-based activities on their own time during weeks 2 and 5. Examples of such activities include writing a brief statement about their perspective on the usefulness of healthy eating and sharing it with physician colleagues in their group through the private and secure message board of a web-based educational platform.

Locations (1)

Stanford University

Stanford, California, United States