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Effect of Mindfulness Training Program on Surgical Nurses

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Summary

Clinical trial NCT07553169 registered on ClinicalTrials.gov describes a randomized controlled single-blind study at Afyonkarahisar Health Sciences University Health Practice and Research Center in Turkey evaluating the effect of a 4-week mindfulness training program on mindfulness levels, psychological resilience, and work motivation among surgical nurses. Eligible nurses will be randomly assigned to an experimental group receiving mindfulness training (8 sessions, 40 minutes each) or a control group receiving no intervention. Data will be collected at baseline and 4 weeks post-training using validated instruments (MAAS, CD-RISC-10, and Nurses' Work Motivation Scale).

“This randomized controlled single-blind study aims to evaluate the effect of mindfulness training on mindfulness levels, psychological resilience, and work motivation among surgical nurses.”

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About this source

ClinicalTrials.gov is the NIH-run registry of every clinical trial conducted in the United States, plus most international trials sponsored by US-based companies or institutions. By federal law, sponsors must register Phase 2 through Phase 4 studies before enrolling patients and post results within a year of completion. This feed tracks every new trial registration and study update, around 700 a month: drug interventions, device studies, behavioral protocols, observational research. Watch this if you scout drug candidates moving into mid or late-stage development, monitor competitor pipelines, or follow rare disease research where new trials signal patient hope. GovPing parses sponsor, phase, intervention, and target indication on each entry.

What changed

A new clinical trial registration (NCT07553169) on ClinicalTrials.gov describes a randomized controlled single-blind study evaluating mindfulness training for surgical nurses at Afyonkarahisar Health Sciences University Health Practice and Research Center in Turkey. The 4-week intervention consists of 2 sessions per week (40 minutes each). Eligible participants are nurses working in surgical clinics who will be randomly assigned to either the mindfulness training group or a control group with no intervention. The study will measure outcomes at baseline and 4 weeks post-training using the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale (MAAS), Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale Short Form (CD-RISC-10), and Nurses' Work Motivation Scale.

Clinical trial sponsors and investigators conducting similar healthcare worker wellness or mindfulness intervention research should ensure compliance with ClinicalTrials.gov registration and results reporting requirements. Institutions may find the study outcomes relevant to developing evidence-based employee wellness programs for nurses in high-stress surgical environments.

Archived snapshot

Apr 27, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

← ClinicalTrials.gov Studies

Effect of a Mindfulness Training Program on Surgical Nurses

N/A NCT07553169 Kind: NA Apr 27, 2026

Abstract

This randomized controlled single-blind study aims to evaluate the effect of mindfulness training on mindfulness levels, psychological resilience, and work motivation among surgical nurses. Surgical nurses work in highly demanding environments characterized by complex patient care processes, unpredictable complications, and intensive workloads, which may negatively affect their psychological resilience and work motivation. Mindfulness-based interventions have been reported to improve psychological well-being, coping strategies, and professional functioning among healthcare professionals.

The study will be conducted with nurses working in surgical clinics at Afyonkarahisar Health Sciences University Health Practice and Research Center. Eligible nurses will be randomly assigned to either an experimental group receiving mindfulness training or a control group receiving no intervention. The mindfulness training program will be delivered over four weeks, consisting of two sessions per week, each lasting 40 minutes.

Data will be collected using the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale (MAAS), Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale Short Form (CD-RISC-10), and Nurses' Work Motivation Scale. Measurements will be performed at baseline and four weeks after completion of the training program. The findings of this study are expected to contribute to improving psychological resilience, mindfulness, and work motivation among surgical nurses and support the development of effective supportive c...

Conditions: Mindfulness Training

Interventions: Mindfulness Training

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Classification

Agency
NIH
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor
Docket
NCT07553169

Who this affects

Applies to
Clinical investigators Healthcare providers
Industry sector
6211 Healthcare Providers
Activity scope
Clinical trial registration Healthcare research
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Healthcare
Operational domain
Clinical Operations
Topics
Public Health

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