Effectiveness of and Mechanisms of Change in a Self-Help Web- and App-Based Resilience Intervention on Perceived Stress in the General Working Population: Randomized Controlled Trial
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
Standard
In: Journal of Medical Internet Research, Vol. 28, e78335, 05.01.2026.
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
Harvard
APA
Vancouver
Bibtex
}
RIS
TY - JOUR
T1 - Effectiveness of and Mechanisms of Change in a Self-Help Web- and App-Based Resilience Intervention on Perceived Stress in the General Working Population
T2 - Randomized Controlled Trial
AU - Hannibal, Sandy
AU - Behrendt, Dörte
AU - Wessa, Michèle
AU - Schäfer, Sarah K.
AU - Dalkner, Nina
AU - Lehr, Dirk
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2026 JMIR Publications Inc.. All rights reserved.
PY - 2026/1/5
Y1 - 2026/1/5
N2 - Background: Promoting individual resilience-that is, maintaining or regaining mental health despite stressful circumstances- is regarded as an important endeavor to prevent mental illness. However, digital resilience interventions designed to enhance mental health have yielded mixed results. Such heterogeneous effects reflect a variety of unsolved conceptual challenges in interventional resilience research. These range from grounding interventions in resilience frameworks, using theory or targeting etiologically important resilience factors as intervention content, to a lack of knowledge about the mechanisms underlying effects, and using techniques specifically developed to foster psychosocial resources. The weband app-based resilience intervention RESIST was designed to address these challenges, mainly by using both the Positive Appraisal Style Theory of Resilience as its theoretical foundation and interventional techniques from Strengths-Based Cognitive Behavioral Therapy. Objective: This study's primary aim was to evaluate the effectiveness of RESIST on perceived stress in a general working population as a means of universal prevention, relative to a waitlist control group. A secondary study aim was to explore the resilience factors of self-efficacy, optimism, self-compassion, and perceived social support, the intervention targets as potential mediators of its effect on stress and self-perceived resilience. Methods: In total, 352 employees were randomly assigned to either a self-help version of RESIST or a waitlist control group. Data were collected via the web at baseline, postintervention, and at 3- and 6-month (intervention group [IG] only) follow-ups. The primary outcome was perceived stress, measured with the Perceived Stress Scale-10. Secondary outcomes included self-perceived resilience, the resilience factors targeted, and other mental and work-related health outcomes. Results: The IG reported significantly less stress than controls postintervention (Δ=-3.14; d=-0.54, 95% CI -0.75 to -0.34, and P<.001) and at 3-month follow-up (Δ=-2.79; d=-0.47, 95% CI -0.71 to -0.22, and P=.002). These improvements in the IG were maintained at 6-month follow-up. Favorable between-group differences also were detected for self-perceived resilience and the resilience factors. IG participants completed on average 2.2 (SD 2.3) web-based sessions and used the app's core feature a median of 14 times (IQR 4.00-33.75, range 1-220). The positive effects of the intervention on stress and resilience were primarily mediated by changes in optimism and self-compassion. No evidence was found that self-efficacy and social support also acted as mediators. Conclusions: In a sample of employees experiencing heightened work-burden levels, RESIST was effective in reducing perceived stress and increasing self-perceived resilience as well as the targeted resilience factors. Mediation analyses suggested that developing a positive future outlook and a self-compassionate attitude toward oneself may be key drivers to enhance resilience. Changing the quality of social relationships and strengthening the belief in one's abilities may require more time, the involvement of others, or personal support from an eCoach to ensure sufficient learning opportunities.
AB - Background: Promoting individual resilience-that is, maintaining or regaining mental health despite stressful circumstances- is regarded as an important endeavor to prevent mental illness. However, digital resilience interventions designed to enhance mental health have yielded mixed results. Such heterogeneous effects reflect a variety of unsolved conceptual challenges in interventional resilience research. These range from grounding interventions in resilience frameworks, using theory or targeting etiologically important resilience factors as intervention content, to a lack of knowledge about the mechanisms underlying effects, and using techniques specifically developed to foster psychosocial resources. The weband app-based resilience intervention RESIST was designed to address these challenges, mainly by using both the Positive Appraisal Style Theory of Resilience as its theoretical foundation and interventional techniques from Strengths-Based Cognitive Behavioral Therapy. Objective: This study's primary aim was to evaluate the effectiveness of RESIST on perceived stress in a general working population as a means of universal prevention, relative to a waitlist control group. A secondary study aim was to explore the resilience factors of self-efficacy, optimism, self-compassion, and perceived social support, the intervention targets as potential mediators of its effect on stress and self-perceived resilience. Methods: In total, 352 employees were randomly assigned to either a self-help version of RESIST or a waitlist control group. Data were collected via the web at baseline, postintervention, and at 3- and 6-month (intervention group [IG] only) follow-ups. The primary outcome was perceived stress, measured with the Perceived Stress Scale-10. Secondary outcomes included self-perceived resilience, the resilience factors targeted, and other mental and work-related health outcomes. Results: The IG reported significantly less stress than controls postintervention (Δ=-3.14; d=-0.54, 95% CI -0.75 to -0.34, and P<.001) and at 3-month follow-up (Δ=-2.79; d=-0.47, 95% CI -0.71 to -0.22, and P=.002). These improvements in the IG were maintained at 6-month follow-up. Favorable between-group differences also were detected for self-perceived resilience and the resilience factors. IG participants completed on average 2.2 (SD 2.3) web-based sessions and used the app's core feature a median of 14 times (IQR 4.00-33.75, range 1-220). The positive effects of the intervention on stress and resilience were primarily mediated by changes in optimism and self-compassion. No evidence was found that self-efficacy and social support also acted as mediators. Conclusions: In a sample of employees experiencing heightened work-burden levels, RESIST was effective in reducing perceived stress and increasing self-perceived resilience as well as the targeted resilience factors. Mediation analyses suggested that developing a positive future outlook and a self-compassionate attitude toward oneself may be key drivers to enhance resilience. Changing the quality of social relationships and strengthening the belief in one's abilities may require more time, the involvement of others, or personal support from an eCoach to ensure sufficient learning opportunities.
KW - digital mental health intervention
KW - internet-based intervention
KW - mobile intervention
KW - mobile phone
KW - occupational eMental health
KW - prevention
KW - randomized controlled trial
KW - RCT
KW - resilience factor
KW - resilience mechanism
KW - resilience training
KW - stress
KW - Health sciences
KW - Psychology
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105026507005&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.2196/78335
DO - 10.2196/78335
M3 - Journal articles
AN - SCOPUS:105026507005
VL - 28
JO - Journal of Medical Internet Research
JF - Journal of Medical Internet Research
SN - 1439-4456
M1 - e78335
ER -
