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Depression, Anxiety clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Depression, Anxiety.

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NCT ID: NCT06121284 Not yet recruiting - Suicidal Ideation Clinical Trials

iTBS+D-Cycloserine for Youth Suicide

Start date: November 2023
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Background and Rationale: Suicide is the second leading cause of death in Canadian Emerging Adults (EAs; 18-24yrs). Current treatments for suicidal thoughts and behaviors are limited and novel treatments are required to save lives. Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) is a non-invasive neurostimulation treatment for major depressive disorder, a mental health condition at high risk for suicide. It is well tolerated and effective. However, in the child and youth population, it does not appear to be superior to sham-TMS. Therefore, strategies for enhancing TMS outcomes are required. Over time, TMS can change the function of brain regions important in depression to reduce the symptoms of depression, including suicidal ideation. The investigators believe this occurs through a process called 'synaptic plasticity', or the process by which neurons change their connectivity with other neurons in an activity-dependent manner. Using an adjunct to facilitate these changes in the EA population may improve TMS outcomes, including its effect on suicidal ideation. The investigators' previous data indicates that, in adults, the effects of a TMS protocol called intermittent theta-burst stimulation (iTBS) can be enhanced by pairing stimulation with a medication called D-Cycloserine. This FDA-approved medication leads to enhanced synaptic plasticity with iTBS. In adults, this combination led to greater improvements in depression symptoms, with a notable rapid resolution of suicidal thoughts as well as improvements on a computerized test that is associated with future suicidal behavior. Research Question and Objectives: To conduct a 2-week double-blind placebo-controlled randomized clinical trial where 60 participants will be randomly assigned to one of two groups: 1) accelerated iTBS+D-Cycloserine, and 2) accelerated iTBS+placebo. Participants will receive a weight-based dose of D-Cycloserine or placebo as an adjunct to iTBS (25mg/17.5kg of body weight).

NCT ID: NCT06113029 Not yet recruiting - Depression, Anxiety Clinical Trials

Depressive and Anxiety Disorders in Patients With Chronic Liver Diseases

Start date: December 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The aim of this observational study is to learn about the prevalence of depressive and anxiety disorders among patients with chronic liver diseases

NCT ID: NCT06087159 Not yet recruiting - Depression, Anxiety Clinical Trials

Promoting Mental Health of Teachers and Caregiver Using a Personalized mHealth Toolkit in Uganda

Start date: August 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a randomized controlled trial with 8 schools (4 intervention and 4 wait-list control schools) including 160 caregivers (80 teachers and 80 parents), with the aim of pilot testing the implementation process, feasibility, acceptability, usage patterns, and efficacy of the mHealth Toolkit for Wellness & Empowering Lives of School Community (mWEL) in Uganda. The mWEL-App is a preventive intervention tool for teachers and parents as a self-help support modality. Caregivers who need support in navigating the toolkit will be supported by P-CHWs. The investigators hypothesize that: 1) relative to the control, caregivers receiving the mWEL will have better efficacy outcomes (mental health literacy, and mental health outcomes); and 2) mWEL implementation will have high acceptability, appropriateness, and feasibility.

NCT ID: NCT06049420 Not yet recruiting - Obesity Clinical Trials

Lifestyle Medicine: Establishing Clinical Approaches to Chronic Disease for Rural Patients

Start date: April 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Developed nations worldwide are currently enduring a health crisis, as chronic diseases continue to decrease quality of life and promote additional disease states or even death for much of the population. Rural populations are at a particular disadvantage, as they lack access to health clubs, wellness programs and similar resources that are more available in urban areas. Although pharmaceutical therapies have continued to show therapeutic advancements, the rates of disease onset and death from chronic disease has not seen similar improvements, and in fact continue to worsen. Excitingly, significant evidence has been published demonstrating an affordable, effective treatment to directly treat and prevent these chronic diseases, but few have demonstrated successful implementation of this therapy, which is improved lifestyle. Specifically, physical activity and healthy body composition are powerful therapeutics that have been demonstrated to effectively combat and prevent chronic diseases. Additionally, improving these lifestyle factors are often more effective than pharmaceutical interventions without the wide range of side effects. Unfortunately, barriers exist on multiple tiers in the practice of family medicine that demote the implementation of lifestyle medicine. To better serve patients at risk of, or suffering from chronic disease, the investigators are seeking to establish a lifestyle medicine prescription program for rural West Virginia. This program will provide patient education on the benefits of physical activity, body composition, and help patients identify strategies to implement healthy lifestyle choices that can be sustainable for the long-term. Patients will be advised on local opportunities to increase physical activity (yoga studio, martial arts, fitness facilities, aquatic center, etc.) and provided access to the facilities they are most likely to adhere to regularly. They will also be provided training on exercise techniques, equipment, and facilities to increase familiarity and comfort in these settings.

NCT ID: NCT06027047 Not yet recruiting - Anxiety Disorders Clinical Trials

Breakthrough Anxiety and Sleep Evaluation Using Linked Devices and Smartphone Application Onar (BASEL)

BASEL
Start date: September 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Sleep is not simply the absence of wakefulness. Sleep is an active procedure, normally happening every night, and is absolutely vital. Good sleep is essential for our well-being. Survival without food can be further than without sleep. Work time and commuting time seem to affect total sleep time and night bedtime. Social and work obligation can, therefore, suppress sleep time. Sleep deprived individuals may be facing anxiety and depression symptoms. The aim of this study is to investigate the presence of anxiety and depression symptoms among adults with the use of the smartphone application Onar. Onar app will be used to gather information from wearable devices of the users including total sleep time, sleep efficiency, wake after sleep onset time. An established questionnaire (Hospital Anxiety Depression Scale/ HADS) will be used to quantify and detect the presence of anxiety and depression in the study population.

NCT ID: NCT05743920 Not yet recruiting - Stress Clinical Trials

Self-help Forest Bathing (Shinrin-yoku) on Depression, Anxiety, and Stress

Start date: February 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The objective of this pilot randomized controlled trial is to evaluate the efficacy and acceptability of self-help forest bathing on depression, anxiety, and stress in the Hong Kong adult population. Prior to all study procedures, eligible participants will be required to complete an online informed consent form (with telephone support). Around 80 eligible participants aged between 18 to 65 years old with at least a mild level of depression, anxiety, or stress symptoms will be randomly assigned to either the self-help forest bathing intervention group (FB group) or the waitlist control group (WL group) in a ratio of 1:1. Participants in the FB group will receive forest bathing guidance via an in-house smartphone app. The WL group will be asked to maintain their typical activity in week 1-7. This group will receive the guide upon trial completion in week 8. The outcomes of the interest will include generalized anxiety symptoms, depressive symptoms, insomnia symptoms, wellbeing, health-related quality of life, functional impairment at baseline (week 0), immediate (week 7), and 1-month post-intervention assessments (week 10). Treatment credibility and acceptability will be collected at baseline and immediately after the intervention.

NCT ID: NCT05679362 Not yet recruiting - Depression, Anxiety Clinical Trials

Online Brief CBT Intervention for Women With PCOS

How2deal
Start date: June 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Primary Objective: -To study if an online individual brief CBT (group A) intervention is effective for psychological distress (anxiety and depression) compared to a CAU group in patients with PCOS at 3 and 6 months relative to baseline. Secondary Objective(s): 1. To study if an online group based brief CBT (group B) is more effective for anxiety and depression compared to CAU in patients with PCOS at 3 and 6 months relative to baseline. 2. To determine if an online individual brief CBT (group A) is effective for improvements in QoL, coping strategies, body image and sleep quality compared to CAU in patients with PCOS at 3 and 6 months relative to baseline. 3. To determine if an group based brief CBT (group B) is more effective for improvements in QoL, coping strategies, body image and sleep quality compared to CAU in patients with PCOS at 3 and 6 months relative to baseline. 4. If A and B are effective compared to CAU, we will compare online individual brief CBT (group A) to online group based brief CBT (group B) for anxiety and depression, QoL, coping strategies, body image and sleep quality compared to in patients with PCOS at 3 and 6 months relative to baseline.

NCT ID: NCT05583851 Not yet recruiting - Cancer Clinical Trials

Investigating Whether Digital Acceptance Commitment Therapy Can Improve Mental Health for Hong Kong Cancer Patients Suffering From Depressive and Anxiety Symptoms.

Digi-ACT
Start date: November 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this clinical trial is to validate the use of digital Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (Digi-ACT) in Hong Kong curative cancer patients with depressive and anxiety symptoms. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Can Digi-ACT reduce depressive or anxiety symptoms? - Can Digi-ACT improved health-related quality of life? - Is Digi-ACT an acceptable and feasible intervention for users? - What are the factors that influence the success of Digi-ACT? - Can the video journals used in Digi-ACT predict depressive symptoms? Intervention group participants will install the Digi-ACT mobile application and undergo a 3-4 week long intervention. They will have to fill out questionnaires at baseline, immediately after the intervention, and at three month follow up to measure depression and anxiety symptoms, health-related quality of life, acceptability of the intervention, and other process outcomes related to the intervention itself. Researchers will compare the outcomes with a group of participants that undergo a 3-4 week long period where they navigate a similar mobile platform that gives bi-daily psychoeducational videos that also fill out the same clinical questionnaires at baseline, post-intervention, and at three month follow up.

NCT ID: NCT05535101 Not yet recruiting - Depression, Anxiety Clinical Trials

Non-invasive Brain Stimulation in Patients With Methamphetamine Use Disorder

Start date: September 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study aims to apply the intermittent theta burst transcranial magnetic stimulation (iTBS) treatment and evaluate the effect in improving craving, affective symptoms, and cognitive function for those participants in the community with amphetamine use. An electroencephalography and blood biomarkers will also be examined to explore the possible mechanisms.

NCT ID: NCT05493865 Not yet recruiting - Depression, Anxiety Clinical Trials

Parent-Child Single-Session Growth Mindset Intervention on Adolescent Depression and Anxiety Problems

Start date: January 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Depression and anxiety are common mental health problems among adolescents worldwide. In Hong Kong, one in every four secondary school students reports clinical-level depression or anxiety symptoms. Extant research has found that a fixed mindset on intelligence and emotions and failure-is-debilitating belief are closely related to more depression and anxiety symptoms, hopelessness and suicidality. At the same time, recent research also points to the importance of parental mindset. Parents are the primary social support of adolescents; parental belief systems can strongly influence children's affect, behaviour and mental health. However, the effects of parent-child mindset interventions on a child's internalising problems have not yet been empirically examined. As emerging evidence has shown the promise of single-session interventions on reducing and preventing youth internalising problems, this project develops and examines a parent and child single-session intervention on mindsets of intelligence, failure and emotion (PC-SMILE) - to tackle depression and anxiety in young people and promote parental well-being. Using a two-arm randomised controlled trial, the proposed study will examine the effectiveness of PC-SMILE on reducing depression and anxiety symptoms among children, reducing parental anxiety, enhancing perceived control and parent-child relationships. A total of 366 parent-child dyads will be recruited from eight secondary schools and randomly assigned to either the PC-SMILE intervention group or the no-intervention waitlist control group. The PC-SMILE is approximately 45 minutes in length. Parent and child mental health and family relationship will be assessed at three time points: baseline before intervention (T1), within two weeks post-intervention (T2) and three months post-intervention (T3). A pilot test (n = 9) has supported the feasibility and acceptability of the PC-SMILE intervention. We hypothesise that the PC-SMILE intervention will significantly improve child depression and anxiety and parent anxiety (primary outcome) and significantly improve secondary outcomes, including child perceived control over emotion, children's and parents' hopelessness, psychological wellbeing, and parent-child relationships. The intention-to-treat principle and linear-regression-based maximum likelihood multi-level models will be used for data analysis. The project brings together experts in mindset research, family therapy, statistics, youth depression, and psychiatry. The Principal Investigator's strong connection with schools ensures the feasibility of the study. This study will not only provide evidence on parent-child growth mindset intervention for adolescent internalising problems but can also serve as a scalable and accessible intervention for improving the well-being of young people and their parents.