View clinical trials related to Depressive Disorder.
Filter by:This randomized trial intervention will provide e-CBT for MDD through the Online Psychotherapy Tool (OPTT), a secure, cloud-based, digital mental health platform. Participants (age: 18-65 years) will be offered an e-CBT program tailored to MDD over 12 weeks to address their depressive symptoms. Participants will complete pre-designed modules and homework assignments while receiving personalized feedback and asynchronous interaction with a therapist through the platform. The content of the e-CBT modules is designed to mirror in-person standard CBT for MDD. There will be 12 weekly sessions that include approximately 30 slides each along with interactive content, delivered through OPTT. Using clinically validated symptomology questionnaires, the efficacy of the e-CBT program will be evaluated. Both groups will receive the 12-week e-CBT program with one group receiving the standard program. In the second arm, a stepped care approach can be implemented if deemed necessary by the care provider. This decision will be made if the participant has not shown improvement. Questionnaire data along with physiological data will be used to determine the decision.
Depressive Disorders constitute an increasing global health concern and available treatments for young people have not been sufficiently effective in haltering this trend. The novel group treatment program "Training for Awareness, Resilience, and Action" (TARA) was developed to target specific mechanisms based on neuroscientific findings in adolescent depression. TARA is framed within the National Institute of Mental Health's Research Domain Criteria and has documented feasibility and preliminary efficacy in adolescents with depression. In this study, young people (age: 15-22) with depression will be recruited from specialized Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Youth Clinics and randomized to receive either TARA or Standard Treatment (ST) until n=67 is reached in each arm. Outcome measures will be obtained before randomization (T0), 6 weeks after treatment start (T0.5), at 3- and 6 months follow-up (T1, T2). The primary outcome measure is Reynold's Adolescent Depression Scale (RADS-2) score at T1. Secondary outcome measures are RADS-2-score at T2, clinician depression rating with Children's Depression Rating Scale, Revised at T1,and self-rated anxiety with Multidimensional Anxiety Scale for Children, 2nd ed. at T1 and T2. Other outcomes include heart rate variability and systemic bioindicators for depression from blood and hair. Data collected from subgroups within the study will include: brain magnetic resonance imaging and accelerometry. Qualitative interviews will be performed to reach a more comprehensive understanding of the subjective experience of being depressed and to what extent treatment adequately addresses this experience. A 2-year follow-up (T3) will be performed and presented separately. The study will be the first Randomized Controlled Trial to examine the clinical effectiveness of TARA compared to ST for young people with depression. The investigators hypothesize that (1) TARA will result in greater reduction of depression symptoms compared to ST and that group differences will be maintained or increased at T2, (2) the treatment effect of TARA will be mediated by improved emotion regulation, sleep, and psychological flexibility, (3) bioindicators for depression will improve more in the TARA-arm compared to the ST-arm, (4) it will be possible/meaningful to explore the contextual factors perceived to drive the depression onset and maintenance, and the extent to which the different treatments address these factors.
This study investigates the effects of a single dose of oxytocin (OT) delivered via a nasal spray in women with and without traits of postnatal depression (PND).
Depressed mothers (pregnant and post-delivery) make up a significant portion of Maternal, Infant, and Early Childhood Home Visiting (MIECHV) clients. Home visited mothers often experience family conflict that precipitates or worsens their depressive symptoms. This study uses an effectiveness-implementation hybrid type 1 design with a pilot randomized trial to test the feasibility, acceptability, tolerability, safety, and preliminary effectiveness of an innovative family therapy intervention that uses technology to bypass barriers to increase access to treatment for this vulnerable population.
This study is designed to help individuals cope with their current depressive symptoms by providing them access to a 4-week online Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy: Be Mindful. Research has shown that completion of the Be Mindful intervention can reduce depressive symptoms in a community sample, and this study aims to evaluate if it can also help reduce depressive symptoms in individuals with a confirmed history of depression. Participants will either receive the intervention at the start of the study or four months after the start of the study (i.e., at 3-month follow-up), which will allow research staff to assess if reductions in depression are due to the intervention or something else. Research staff will also evaluate if the reduction in depressive symptoms lasts over the three months following intervention, and will investigate possible reasons for the change in depression (i.e., why the intervention produces change).
The Safety and Efficacy of Psilocybin as an Adjunctive Therapy in Participants with Treatment-Resistant Depression
This is a randomized controlled trial (RCT) of the Meru Health Program (MHP) versus a waitlist (WL) control group, which will be offered access to the MHP after the waitlist period (12 weeks) is over, for adults with depression. The Meru Health Program (MHP) is a 12-week mobile mental health intervention delivered via Smartphone app that includes components of several evidence-based treatments (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Behavioral Activation Therapy, Mindfulness Meditation) and also several promising therapies (heart rate variability-biofeedback [HRVB], nutritional psychiatry, sleep training) that is overseen by a licensed clinical therapist.
With this study, the investigators will address the following scientific aims: 1. Demonstrate the antidepressant effects of CBD in human adults with treatment refractory MDD as measured by standard rating scales. 2. Confirm CBD's safety profile in human adult patients with MDD.
In the future, we plan to conduct an 8-week diet intervention to investigate whether a healthy Nordic diet improves depression symptoms. The present pilot study tested whether the planned meals and diets were well-liked and accepted by participants (both depressed and non-depressed) in order to ensure that the future diet intervention will be feasible and successful. We also investigated whether any changes in health occurred after 8 days of this diet intervention.
We aim to learn whether use of a mixed reality device for transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) targeting can improve treatment outcomes compared to targeting through scalp measurements or a commercial neuronavigation system. Prior studies indicate that neuronavigation can lead to improved treatment outcomes compared to scalp measurements, but neuronavigation adaption has been lacking due to the increased burden of the neuronavigation setup on the TMS operator. We will assess whether use of a mixed reality device can decrease that burden and speed up the neuronavigation process and is feasible to be used in a clinical setting.