
Coping Skills Training to Reduce Psychosocial Risk Factors for Medical Disorders: A Field Trial Evaluating Effectiveness in Multiple Worksites
Author(s) -
Williams Virginia P.,
Brenner Sharon L.,
Helms Michael J.,
Williams Redford B.
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
journal of occupational health
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.664
H-Index - 59
ISSN - 1348-9585
DOI - 10.1539/joh.o8016
Subject(s) - psychosocial , coping (psychology) , medicine , clinical psychology , psychology , psychiatry
Coping Skills Training to Reduce Psychosocial Risk Factors for Medical Disorders: A Field Trial Evaluating Effectiveness in Multiple Worksites: Virginia P. W illiams , et al . Williams LifeSkills, Inc., USAObjective To determine whether a commercial coping skills training program shown to reduce psychosocial risk factors in randomized clinical trials of patients with coronary heart disease is also effective in achieving similar improvements among stressed workers in a real world corporate setting. Methods Conduct an observational trial to evaluate the impact of the Williams LifeSkills R Workshop on depression, social support, anxiety, and hostility in a sample of 110 employees working at multiple U.S. sites of a client of Williams LifeSkills, Inc. Results All psychosocial risk factors showed highly significant improvements from pre‐ to post‐training. Except for social support, these improvements were maintained at six months follow‐up. Conclusions These findings provide support for the effectiveness of the Williams LifeSkills R Workshop by suggesting that its efficacy, as demonstrated in randomized clinical trials, generalizes to real world settings like the multiple U.S. work sites of a corporate client.