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Family Conflict clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Family Conflict.

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NCT ID: NCT05086328 Not yet recruiting - Parenting Clinical Trials

The Effect of Nonviolent Resistance in Parent Group Training in Child Psychiatric Care

Start date: October 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

In a Flemish sample of parents of children with psychiatric problems, this study evaluates the effect of a parent group training based on nonviolent resistance on family functioning, parenting variables and mental states of the parents, pre- and post-training.

NCT ID: NCT03672942 Not yet recruiting - Aggression Clinical Trials

Communication Skills vs. Mindfulness for IPV

Start date: September 15, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This tests the immediate impact of two brief interventions on couples reporting intimate partner violence using the proximal change experimental design. Couples will be randomly assigned to a mindfulness conditions, a communication exercise or a placebo condition. Outcome measures include observed and experimentally assessed aggression.

NCT ID: NCT03221530 Not yet recruiting - Suicidal Ideation Clinical Trials

Early Intervention for Suicide Risk Among Immigrant Youth

Start date: October 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this project is to develop and test a family-based preventive intervention for suicide risk among 1st and 2nd generation immigrant Latino/a adolescents. The intervention will focus on reducing suicide risk by reducing family conflict and intergenerational cultural conflict and improving parent-child communication. The investigators will first develop the 8-session preventive intervention with quantitative data from analysis of existing longitudinal studies and qualitative feedback from Latino youth and their caregivers, clinicians, administrators, and research consultants, as well as results from initial pilot testing of the intervention. The investigators will then conduct a pilot randomized trial with 40 adolescents and their families to test feasibility, acceptability, and impact on intervention targets. Successful development of the intervention would improve mental health outcomes for a growing and underserved portion of the U.S. population.