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Suicide and Self-harm clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Suicide and Self-harm.

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NCT ID: NCT05078970 Recruiting - Suicidal Ideation Clinical Trials

Advancing Suicide Intervention Strategies for Teens During High Risk Periods

ASSIST
Start date: August 11, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To inform the effective management of adolescent suicide risk by evaluating promising treatments and developing the evidence-base for interventions that are well suited for widespread adoption, sustained quality, and impact.

NCT ID: NCT04909203 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Suicide and Self-harm

iKinnect2.0 for Juvenile Justice Involved Youth at Risk for Suicide

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

This study is a 16-week intent-to-treat randomized controlled trial (RCT) with 120 suicidal juvenile justice (JJ)-involved transition-age (TA) youth (age 15-21 years) and a primary caregiver (dyads). Dyads will be randomly assigned to iKinnect2.0 (n=60 dyads) or Life360 (control app) plus an electronic suicide resources brochure (n=60 dyads). This design will test iKinnect2.0's new features for suicide prevention against TA youth awareness of and access to high-quality suicide prevention resources, while simultaneously testing features relating to conduct problems and parent management against parents knowing the TA youth's whereabouts in real-time and controlling for dyad member engagement in technology (Life360). Participants will be assessed at baseline, 4, 8 and 16 weeks. Primary youth-reported outcomes relating to suicide risk include: Suicidal behaviors (ideation, planning, attempts), non-suicidal self-injurious behaviors, self-efficacy in coping with distress, and use of imminent distress coping strategies (behavioral skills, use of crisis stabilization plan). Youth will also report on their criminal behavior. Primary caregiver-reported outcome variables relating to youth suicide include: Self-efficacy in applying family-based suicide-prevention strategies and reported use of those strategies; caregivers will also report on their own functioning (efficacy/confidence in parenting skills, life stress), TA youth functioning (internalizing and externalizing symptoms), parental management behaviors (expectation clarity, parental monitoring, discipline effectiveness/consistency, use of rewards), and parent-youth relationship quality (communication, conflict, support). App satisfaction and use of technology outcomes (i.e., degree of app usage, features used) will be examined and reported descriptively.

NCT ID: NCT04797455 Recruiting - Parenting Clinical Trials

Parent Intervention for Psychiatrically-Hospitalized Youth

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

The purpose of the present study is to conduct a pilot randomized clinical trial (RCT) of a parent coaching intervention for parents of youth hospitalized for suicidal ideation, suicide attempt(s), or non-suicidal self-injury. Parents will receive either the parent coaching intervention (which includes safety planning and behavioral parenting skills training with a clinician and assistance with linkage to follow-up care by a case manager) or treatment as usual (TAU) for the inpatient unit. The long-term goal of the research is to determine if augmenting standard inpatient treatment with additional parenting intervention improves youth treatment response on suicide-related outcomes (i.e., suicidal ideation, non-suicidal self-injury, and suicide attempts). The goal of this pilot RCT is to collect preliminary data needed for a larger RCT, including feasibility, acceptability, safety, tolerability, engagement of the presumed mechanism of change (changes in parent emotions and behaviors), and signal detection of any changes in youth suicide-related outcomes.

NCT ID: NCT04779099 Enrolling by invitation - Clinical trials for Borderline Personality Disorder

Trial of a Brief Psychological Intervention for Suicidal Patients With Borderline Personality Disorder in the Emergency Department

Start date: October 22, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

When in crisis, people with borderline personality disorder (BPD) frequently seek care in emergency departments (EDs) often presenting with suicide and self-harm behaviour. There is no established evidence-based brief intervention for patients with BPD in ED settings, however a 4-session psychotherapeutic intervention for people with personality disorders in ED settings was tested in Australia and showed promising results in reduced health care utilization. The proposed pilot randomized controlled trial will assess the feasibility of delivering this 4-session intervention in the ED for people with BPD who present with suicidal ideation or self-harm with the aim of reducing health care utilization.

NCT ID: NCT04751968 Completed - Suicidal Ideation Clinical Trials

BRAVA: Building Resilience and Attachment in Vulnerable Adolescents

BRAVA
Start date: April 12, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The prevalence of suicidal ideation (SI) among adolescents in North America is high, making it critical to develop evidence-based brief interventions for adolescents with SI that target healthy coping skills and relationships. BRAVA is a novel brief group intervention for adolescents with mild to moderate SI and their caregivers; youth are taught skills for coping and relating more effectively with others. Caregivers learn about adolescent development, effective parenting and the importance of connection. The goal of the randomized controlled trial is to assess the efficacy of a virtually-delivered, brief group intervention for adolescents with mild to moderate SI and their caregivers in reducing SI.

NCT ID: NCT04296812 Completed - Self Esteem Clinical Trials

Self-Esteem: A Protective Mechanism for Adolescent Mental Health

Start date: March 13, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will explore the effects of the Injeti Self-Love Model intervention on adolescents challenged with low-self-esteem leading to self-harming, suicidal thoughts and suicidal attempts. This study will examine the promotion of self-esteem through the Injeti Self-Love Model as a safety measure against "poor behavioral habits" such as intentional self-harming, substance abuse, suicidal thinking and suicide attempt as means to cope. Study participation will include initial screening, self-assessment, occupational therapy self-esteem intervention of one session, with an individual follow-up, along with an interview, and finishing up with a one-month follow-up interview. The qualitative research is a methodology for investigating and considering the meaning individuals attribute to a significant human experience. The qualitative approach will be structured around a semi-structured interview initiated at the end of the second follow-up session and after 1-month follow-up.

NCT ID: NCT04235127 Active, not recruiting - Suicide Clinical Trials

The Catalonia Suicide Risk Code Epidemiology Study: an Epidemiological Study of Suicide Attempts in Catalonia, Spain

CSRC-Epi
Start date: June 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Suicide attempts (SA) constitute a major public health issue worldwide. Research suggests that 2.7% of adult people ever attempt suicide; among children and adolescents this is estimated to be 6.0%. SA are related to subsequent suicide which represents an annual loss of 34.6 million years of life worldwide. Suicide attempts are also related to persistent physical and mental health issues, psychiatric hospitalizations, impaired academic performance, unemployment, partner abuse victimization and perpetration, having children removed by social services, loneliness, relationship difficulties, impaired social functioning and low life satisfaction. Despite this considerable societal impact, there is a lack of epidemiological research focussing on providing suicide attempt surveillance in the population, to inform public health action aimed at reducing risk for suicide attempts in the population, and to provide data-driven support for suicide risk assessment across healthcare settings. To address this shortcoming, the investigators designed the Catalonia Suicide Risk Code Epidemiology study. Using centralized Electronic Healthcare Record data from the entire public healthcare system of Catalonia, Spain, the CSRC-Epi study aims to estimate reliable suicide incidence rates, identify suicide attempt risk factors, and develop validated suicide attempt risk prediction tools.

NCT ID: NCT04132284 Completed - Parenting Clinical Trials

DBT-Based Parenting Intervention for Parents of Youth at Risk for Suicide

Start date: July 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of the present study is to conduct a pilot randomized clinical trial (RCT) of an 8-10 session DBT-based parenting intervention (DBT PI) plus standard Dialectical Behavior Therapy delivered in the context of an intensive outpatient program (DBT IOP) to DBT IOP alone. The long term goal of the research is to determine if augmenting standard DBT with additional parenting intervention improves youth treatment response on suicide-related outcomes (i.e., suicidal ideation, non-suicidal self-injury and suicide attempts). The goal of this pilot RCT is to collect preliminary data needed for a larger RCT, including feasibility, acceptability, safety, tolerability, engagement of the presumed mechanism of change (changes in parent emotions and behaviors) and signal detection of any changes in youth suicide-related outcomes.

NCT ID: NCT03950765 Recruiting - Suicide, Attempted Clinical Trials

Real-time Intervention for Suicide Risk Reduction

Start date: July 29, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this study is to provide an initial pilot test of an Ecological Momentary Intervention (EMI) designed the reduce the distress associated with negative emotion among individuals at risk for suicide that pairs content from a smartphone with a wearable physiological monitor. Participants will be 25 suicidal adult inpatients who will complete three brief therapy sessions with a study therapist and then complete exercises associated with the study for the duration of the inpatient period and for 28 days after they leave the hospital.

NCT ID: NCT03682406 Completed - Clinical trials for Suicide and Self-harm

CAMS-G Group Therapy for Suicidal Veterans

Start date: October 1, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The primary aim of this pilot study is to determine the feasibility and acceptability of CAMS-G. Our aim is to determine if CAMS-G is an effective treatment and whether it has the potential to be tested in a large-scale setting.