Expressive Writing: A Self-Care Intervention for First Year Undergraduates
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18061/bhac.v3i1.6796Keywords:
college populations, self-care methods/groups, stressAbstract
Background: As incoming students grapple with stress and traumatic experiences at alarming rates, faculty and institutions are increasingly promoting resilience and self-care activities. Expressive writing (EW) may be an underutilized self-care practice for addressing students' stressful or traumatic experiences.
Aim: This pilot study aimed to describe the effects of an expressive writing (EW) intervention on participants' mental and physical health and stress levels.
Methods: The study design was mixed methods. The convenience sample of 32 undergraduate participants were assigned, every other one, to either an EW intervention group who wrote about a stressful or traumatic experience (n = 18), or a neutral writing (NW) group (n = 14) who wrote about trivial topics. Data regarding sample characteristics, cortisol level, quality of life, and impact of the EW intervention were collected via a demographic survey, the SF-36v2® Health Survey (Maruish, 2011), salivary sampling and exit survey, respectively.
Results: Comparison of SF-36v2® pre- to post-test demonstrated higher gains in mental health in the experimental group, relative to the control group. Fourteen (44% of total group) reported that they would recommend EW to a friend to help with stressful or traumatic experiences.
Conclusions: EW may support first year undergraduates' self-care related to addressing past or current stressful or traumatic situations.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2019 Monica Kennison, Connie Lamb, Judy Ponder, Lisa Turner, Aryn C. Karpinski, Laura C. Dzurec
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.