View clinical trials related to Depressive Disorder.
Filter by:The purpose of this 6- month study is to determine the feasibility of a start-up incubator intervention designed to decrease occupational stress and depression for beginning Kentucky farmers. The objectives are to: #1) test the feasibility of a mentorship and start-up incubator intervention on depression in beginning Kentucky farmers using questionnaires administered prestudy, mid-study, and post-study; #2) explore associations between mentorship, occupational stress and depression in beginning Kentucky farmers using specific survey questionnaires to guide future research. This study's results will provide valuable data to agriculture and occupational health researchers. The data will illustrate the impact of mentorship and community support on improving depression and occupational stress of beginning Kentucky farmers.
The purpose of this study is to test patient feasibility and acceptability of virtual reality biofeedback program in postpartum women for anxiety and depression outcomes.
In this project, we will A) track the functioning of a collection of potential neurobiological targets for depression over time, B) examine how fluctuations in the functioning of those targets relates to real-world functioning, and C) in a subset of the sample, determine how the functioning in those targets is altered by a single dose of ketamine.
Nursing home staff face multiple stresses during the Covid-19 pandemic including personal risk of infection, risk of transmission of the virus to residents and relatives, and risk of witnessing end-of-life scenarios under difficult contexts (absence of families). The hypothesis of this study is that the Covid-19 period is associated with an incidence of more than 30% of post-traumatic stress in nursing home staff.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the feasibility of using behavioral activation therapy with caregiver support delivered via telemedicine to older adults with depression and probable mild dementia.
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects up to one in five of women and has profound effects on mothers and their infants. Unfortunately, fewer than 15% of women with PPD receive evidence-based care. This is at least partly due to significant difficulties faced by women in accessing psychotherapies, their preferred treatment for PPD. Around the world, there is a significant lack of healthcare professionals trained to deliver CBT. This study will utilize a randomized controlled trial design (with wait-list controls) and recruit 174 participants to determine if women with a past history of PPD (i.e., lay peers) can be trained to deliver effective group CBT online to women currently struggling with PPD. If peers can be trained to provide effective CBT, more women would receive treatment and the burden of PPD on women, families, and the healthcare system would be significantly reduced.
Viome costumers are consented and recruited for this study and complete the questionnaires upon enrollment. Any participant who previously self reported depression, anxiety, or Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) qualify for this study. All participants receive Viome's diet, supplement and recommendations.
Major depressive disorder, or characterized depressive episode, is a common illness that limits psychosocial functioning and impairs quality of life. The initial goal of treatment for a major depressive episode is complete remission of depressive symptoms. The most commonly used treatments are antidepressants, psychotherapy or a combination of medication and psychotherapy. Music therapy can be considered as one of the complementary therapies in the treatment of the characterized depressive episode and many studies have shown a beneficial effect of musical interventions, even of short duration, on depression and anxiety. In depressive disorders, therapies such as hypnosis or phenomenological psychotherapies lead to modifications of consciousness during which the subject finds the means, notably non-reflexive and in the realm of the imaginary, to overcome anxiety. Generally speaking, in the field of musical cognition, it is considered that music affects the emotions. Unfortunately this approach is often insufficiently refined in cognitive psychology since it is most generally interested in the 6 fundamental emotions: joy, anger, fear, sadness, surprise, disgust. However, during the Baroque period (end of the 16th and 17th centuries), various philosophers and musicians analyzed with great finesse not these fundamental emotions, but more precisely the passions, or "shocks of the soul", that is to say the affects in their great diversity. These affects or passions are thus at the center of Baroque musical composition. In the Barhepsy project, it is suggested that listening to Baroque music, thanks to the rhetoric of the passions included in it, would allow the mobilization of the patients' affects and thus reduce their state of anxiety. During a follow-up consultation, the effects of a 30-minute "musical path" of baroque pieces will be evaluated, exemplifying the reduction of anxiety and the subsequent appeasement, on the conscious experience of subjects suffering from a characterized depressive state associated with anxious symptoms.
This multi-centre research investigates the effects of nature-based treatment group on participants diagnosed with depression. In total, 147 persons participated in the study in various locations in Finland. All participants received treatment as usual (TAU). They were randomised into nature-based group + TAU (n = 70) or TAU-only (n = 77). The participants in the nature-based group + TAU were offered 12 sessions once a week in addition to standard care. The measurement points included pre-treatment measurement at the baseline and post-treatment measurement at the end of the intervention, which was 12 weeks after the pre-treatment measurement. The follow-up measurement was 3 months after the post-treatment measurement. The effects of the intervention were assessed with a clinical measure of depression (BDI-I) and with indicators of psychological distress (CORE-10), subjective well-being (SWEMWBS), work/study ability (WAI) and nature experiences (ROS, KOLU). The participants in the treatment group (nature-based group +TAU) were compared to the participants in the control group who received TAU-only.
This study is being conducted to understand the use of a mobile app (titled Pathway) to help patients track depression symptoms, medications, side effects, and goals in addition to the usual care with their doctor. Investigators will compare the effect of the app over 6 months and examine whether the app can increase engagement between patients and their doctor and help in the management of illnesses as patients start a new treatment for depression. The investigators hope that using an app to facilitate management of depression symptoms, medication use, and side effects will help patients and their providers understand their response to medications and lead to better response and improvements in depression.