The research question above needs to be turned into a testable hypothesis. A hypothesis is a statement rather than a question, and it should make a prediction about what you expect to happen. This is referred to as a directional or alternative hypothesis, and is often abbreviated as H1.
Continuing with the research question example above, the hypothesis might be written as:
“Participants who receive intervention A will show a significant reduction in scores on the Anxiety Scale from baseline to 6-week follow up.”
If your study uses a control group, the hypothesis can be modified to:
“Participants who receive intervention A will score significantly lower on the Anxiety Scale than participants in the wait-list control group.”
Bear in mind that your hypothesis needs to be specific.
Continuing with the earlier example, if your hypothesis only states “Participants who receive the intervention will be less anxious”, it is not specific enough because it does not state how you will know whether anxiety has been reduced or what “less” is in relation to.