View clinical trials related to Depressive Disorder.
Filter by:Persons who struggle with depression smoke at high rates and experience low quit rates in treatment. The best way to improve cessation treatment for this underserved population remains unknown. The proposed trial tests whether the combination of varenicline and behavioral mood management treatment enhances long-term abstinence for depressed smokers and, if so, whether this treatment achieves its effects through addressing the unique psychological factors that appear to maintain tobacco dependence for these smokers.
The aim of the project is to explore if a complementary addition of a care manager for depression treatment in the primary care setting has positive effects concerning reduction of the patients' depressive symptoms as well as improvement of daily function and quality of life in a short- and long-term perspective compared with the traditional Swedish primary care organization. The aim is also to evaluate the care manager function in a health economic perspective. The specific aims are to develop and evaluate an evidence-based care manager program for patients with mild to moderate depression and to compare the evidence-based care manager program to treatment as usual (TAU) in terms of their short- and long-term effects on symptom remission, treatment adherence, care satisfaction, and self-efficacy as well as to perform a cost - effectiveness analysis of the care manager program, i.e. to evaluate the effects of the program on patients' health in relation to the running costs of the program.
A randomized controlled trial to test the whether remote delivery of cognitive based therapy (CBT) is clinically and cost effective when compared to treatment as usual in adolescents and young adults with depression who self-harm.
This trial will compare innovating stimulation parameters, intermittent Theta Burst Stimulation, to the standard high frequency stimulation protocol. The Left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, targeted by MRI navigation will be the site of stimulation in both treatment conditions. The study seeks to determine if there is a superiority in therapeutic efficacy with iTBS protocol compared to conventional one.
Despite advances in both pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy for major depression, non-response and partial-response remain relatively common outcomes, motivating the search for new treatments. This study is concerned with the development of one such novel treatment, the augmentation of exposure-based cognitive-behavior therapy (CBT) with d-cycloserine (DCS).
The purpose of the study is to compare the efficacy of an Hypnotherapeutic Treatment of Depression to Cognitive Behavioral Treatment of Depression in patients with mild to moderate Major Depressive Episodes.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of vilazodone compared with placebo in pediatric outpatients (7-17 years of age) with major depressive disorder.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of vortioxetine (5, 10, and 20 mg) versus placebo during the first 28 weeks of the 32-week double-blind treatment period in the prevention of relapse in participants with MDD who responded to acute treatment with vortioxetine 10 mg.
The study is a randomized pilot trial of a health promotion intervention in the prevention of anxiety and depression in older Hispanics.
Depression during pregnancy is prevalent (15-20%) and has an adverse impact on fetal outcomes including preterm delivery (PTD) and low birthweight (LBW). Currently, significant confusion exists about if and how depression during pregnancy should be treated, given the unknown risk-benefit profiles of various treatments. We propose to conduct a two-stage prospective cohort study to determine if treating depression in pregnancy is effective in improving fetal outcomes, and which treatment is most effective: pharmacotherapy, psychotherapy or a combination. The risk-benefit of the treatments will be examined separately for two depression types: pregnant women with depression only and those with other psychiatric comorbidities to evaluate possible differences in treatment effectiveness between the two groups. Findings will provide answers to long standing stakeholder questions of how to treat depression in pregnancy and which treatment is most effective with the best risk-benefit profile in improving fetal outcomes. Selecting an effective treatment could reduce PTD or LBW, thus, reducing infant mortality and morbidity, and medical costs.