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Suicide clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT02845817 Completed - Palliative Care Clinical Trials

Requests for Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide

DESA
Start date: September 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study take place in the palliative care units of Burgundy-Franche-Comté regions and at the Maison Médicale Jeanne Garnier. The main aim of this project is to analyze and understand the meaning of explicit requests to hasten death (euthanasia and assisted suicide). This involves conducting interviews with patients, carers to whom the request has been expressed and a relative chosen by the patient. This study aims to describe the request over time. This will be done through two series of interviews, one as soon as it is first expressed, then one week later.

NCT ID: NCT02845700 Completed - Clinical trials for Perceptual Olfactory Bias

Perceptual Retraining to Reduce Suicide Risk

PRS
Start date: September 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study will use a prospective design consisting of three phases. The phases are: 1. the development of the perceptual retraining treatment (PRT), 2. the evaluation of the treatment's feasibility and acceptability, and 3. an assessment of its efficacy. During the third phase, a pilot study will be conducted in which participants will be randomly assigned to either PRT or a waitlist control group in order to assess efficacy. Diagnostic information and eligibility criteria will be assessed using the Structured Clinical Interview for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) 4th ed. (SCID) and the Clinician Administered PTSD Scale for DSM-5 (CAPS-5).

NCT ID: NCT02843776 Completed - Suicide, Assisted Clinical Trials

Requests for Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide

EPIDESA2
Start date: January 1, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The study epiDESA2 identifies all explicit requests for euthanasia or assisted suicide expressed by the person him/herself, regardless of which professional is asked and regardless of where the request is made (primary care, health institutions, medico-social institutions including nursing home care or at home) in the Burgundy-Franche-Comté region during six months.

NCT ID: NCT02830334 Terminated - Children Clinical Trials

Use of the Ask Suicide-Screening Questions (ASQ) in Pediatric Outpatient Settings

Start date: July 9, 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Background: Doctors and nurses who work in non-mental health settings need ways to know when patients are at risk. Researchers created the Ask Suicide-Screening Questions (ASQ) to be used in an emergency department for children. This is a 4-item suicide risk screening tool. We wanted to see if this is also a good tool to use in the outpatient setting. Two studies are being done to test it at hospitals. This study is for researchers to analyze the data from those two studies. Objectives: To combine and analyze data from two studies to see how well the ASQ can detect suicide risk in pediatric outpatient clinics. Eligibility: No people are enrolled in this study. Design: Participants in the two non-NIH studies will give consent for their data to be shared. The data will be confidential and secure. They will have no personal information attached to them. Researchers will get the data and analyze them.

NCT ID: NCT02825771 Active, not recruiting - Suicidal Ideation Clinical Trials

Caring Contacts: A Strength-based, Suicide Prevention Trial in 4 Native Communities

CARE
Start date: May 30, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Suicide is the second leading cause of death for American Indians and Alaska Natives aged 18 years and older. This study will evaluate Caring Contacts, a low-cost, sustainable intervention for suicide prevention that sends caring messages to people at risk. The investigators will implement the intervention at four tribal sites, leveraging community strengths and values to address this tragic health disparity in an underserved minority population.

NCT ID: NCT02820636 Completed - Suicide Clinical Trials

Latino/a Adolescents With Suicidal Behavior

Start date: January 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study is about developing the best aftercare treatment possible for Latino/a adolescents who have been hospitalized in a psychiatric unit due to a suicidal crisis (suicidal thoughts or attempts). The treatment's purpose is to help adolescents and their caregivers develop skills to prevent future suicidal crises. Latino/a adolescents usually report more suicidal behavior than other ethnic groups. The question that the investigators want to answer is if a new treatment (socio-cognitive behavioral therapy-(SCBT)) developed to their specific needs, taking into account their culture and aspects of adolescence, performs better than the treatment that they usually receive. Forty six adolescents were recruited from the Bradley Hospital adolescent inpatient unit or the Hasbro Inpatient Medical & Psychiatric Program, or referred to Gateway Healthcare after discharge from other inpatient units in Rhode Island; half of them were assigned randomly to the treatment they would usually receive (TAU) and the other half to the new treatment (SCBT). In both groups, caregivers and adolescents completed questionnaires and interviews before the beginning of treatment and at 3, 6, and 12 months after the treatment begin. Questions to the participants were related to their presenting symptoms, family, social group, problems, and other similar topics. Also, participants were asked about their satisfaction with the treatment they were receiving. The purpose of the questionnaires and interviews are to follow their progress in therapy. At the end, comparisons will be made between the group who participated in TAU and the group who participated in the SCBT, based on the assessment results from the adolescents and caregivers.

NCT ID: NCT02811198 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Major Depressive Disorder

Pain, Reward, Attention and Neurocircuitry: Biomarkers of Suicidality

Start date: January 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The ultimate aim of this study is to identify a biomarker of suicide risk in MDD by measuring the "hedonic spectrum" (pain and reward responsivity), attention and its associated brain structures using brain scans (fMRI and DTI), as well as the stability of markers over time.

NCT ID: NCT02803632 Terminated - Suicide, Attempted Clinical Trials

Clinical and Actigraphic Profile of Young Patients Admitted for Attempted Suicide

ACTIHUMEUR
Start date: February 6, 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

An excess suicide-related morbidity is observed among young people in the Picardie region, as reflected by the > 100% occupation rate of the Amiens University Hospital Adolescent Medicine Unit

NCT ID: NCT02762734 Recruiting - Suicide Clinical Trials

Prevention of Recurrence of Suicide Attempt by Adolescent by Sending SMS (MEDIACONNEX)

MEDIACONNEX
Start date: February 13, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

MEDIACONNEX study propose a new way of connectedness for adolescents after a suicide attempt: it is based on the sending of SMS (or mail or other new media), over a period of 6 months after their suicide attempt (SA), in order to allow them to recourse to the care more easily and so to limit the risk of suicidal recurrence. The MEDIACONNEX study will be a multicenter controlled randomized trial (East of France) and there is a funding from the Hospital. The proposal trial will test the hypothesis that adolescent suicide attempters who are receiving SMS (or mail or other new media) from the unit of care in addition to the usual care will do less SA recurrence, than those who are receiving the usual care. The primary objective is to determine whether the use of SMS (or mail or other new media) to keep in touch with adolescent suicide attempters in addition to the usual care, compare to usual care, will reduce the delay of recurrence of suicide attempt during 6 months after the SA.

NCT ID: NCT02759172 Active, not recruiting - Suicide Clinical Trials

Suicide Prevention Intervention for At-Risk Individuals in Transition

SPIRIT
Start date: April 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The four year SPIRIT Trial, or Suicide Prevention Intervention for at-Risk Individuals in Transition, will recruit 800 pretrial jail detainees at risk for suicide. Each participant will be randomly assigned to today's standard care or to Safety Planning Intervention (SPI) method and then followed for one year after release. Outcomes include suicide events, suicide attempts and ideation, psychiatric symptoms, functioning, treatment utilization, problem-solving, belongingness, and cost-effectiveness.