• Medicine · Oct 2022

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    Intervention for depression among undergraduate religious education students: A randomized controlled trial.

    • Chiedu Eseadi, Leonard Chidi Ilechukwu, Vera Victor-Aigbodion, Abatihun Alehegn Sewagegn, and Amos Nnaemeka Amedu.
    • Department of Educational Psychology, University of Johannesburg, South Africa.
    • Medicine (Baltimore). 2022 Oct 14; 101 (41): e31034.

    BackgroundThis research was designed to investigate the management of depression among undergraduate religious education students and identify the research implications for school-based religious intervention.MethodsThis research is a randomized controlled trial. The treatment condition had 34 undergraduate religious education students but 33 undergraduate religious education students were in the control condition. The treatment process involved a 12-week application of religious rational emotive behavior therapy (RREBT). With Beck's depression inventory, version 2 (BDI-II), data collection was made possible.ResultsCompared to students in the control condition, undergraduate religious education students in the treatment condition demonstrated a significant drop in mean BDI-II scores at post-test (F [1, 65] = 592.043, P < .05, η2p = .90). The effect of RREBT among students in the treatment condition stayed consistent at 2 weeks follow-up (F [1, 65] = 786.396, P < .05, η2p = .92, ΔR2 = .922).ConclusionThe effect of RREBT on depression treatment among undergraduate religious education students was positive and can be consistent. The study results underscore the importance of expanding this treatment approach for these undergraduate education students in Nigeria.Copyright © 2022 the Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.

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