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Suicide clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT00218725 Completed - Clinical trials for Substance-Related Disorders

Effectiveness of Cognitive Therapy for Suicide Attempters With Drug Dependence Disorder

Start date: May 2005
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This study will examine the effectiveness of combining cognitive therapy with enriched usual care for preventing subsequent suicide attempts in people with a drug dependence who have recently attempted suicide.

NCT ID: NCT00183651 Completed - Suicide Clinical Trials

Treatment of Suicidal Women With Borderline Personality Disorder

Start date: April 2004
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This study is a component analysis of dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) to determine the importance of DBT skills training and DBT individual therapy in treating suicidal women with borderline personality disorder.

NCT ID: NCT00118443 Completed - Suicide Clinical Trials

Evaluation of a School-Based Training Program for Suicide Prevention

Start date: March 2004
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This study will determine whether a training program designed to help school staff members identify adolescents at risk for suicide will increase the number of students who are referred to mental health services.

NCT ID: NCT00081367 Completed - Suicide, Attempted Clinical Trials

Community-Based Cognitive Therapy for Suicide Attempters

Start date: February 2004
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This study will determine the effectiveness of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) in preventing future suicide attempts in repeat suicide attempters.

NCT ID: NCT00080158 Completed - Depression Clinical Trials

Treatment of Adolescent Suicide Attempters (TASA)

Start date: March 2004
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to compare the effects of three types of treatments for depressed teenagers who have attempted suicide.

NCT ID: NCT00005566 Active, not recruiting - Suicide, Attempted Clinical Trials

Cognitive Aspects of Adolescent Suicide

Start date: n/a
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this project is to pilot a new scale, The Desperation Scale, in a sample of young adolescents (aged 10-16) seen in the pediatric emergency room who require a psychiatric consultation. The proposed study is designed to assess the psychometric properties of this new scale and to provide information about the cognitive state of young suicidal individuals. It is hypothesized that this scale will be able to discriminate between those who are suicidal and those who are not. Data obtained in this pilot study will provide information about the usefulness of the construct of desperation and will guide future projects aimed at the assessment and treatment of suicidal individuals. The use of cognitive factors to predict suicidal behavior is appealing because they allow the clinician to tap into an individual's perception of his/her life circumstances. However, we believe the popular conceptualization of suicide as a result of "hopeless" thinking ignores an important aspect of suicidal behavior-the motivation to escape. We propose that a model of suicidal behavior that includes escape motivation, which we call the desperation model, will be better able to predict suicide than existing measures. We conceptualize desperation as consisting of three core elements: a sense of entrapment, feelings of anxiety/agitation, and a sense of time urgency. The current pilot study will test a 35-item scale that assesses these three elements of desperation. A pilot study of the Desperation Scale is currently being conducted at the Cornell University Medical Center (P.I. P.M. Marzuk) with depressed, adult inpatients. Our study is original in its use of the scale with an adolescent population and its focus on patients in the emergency room, when they are presumably in a "purer" suicidal state. It is hypothesized that those who are admitted to the emergency room for recent suicidal behavior will endorse feelings of entrapment, anxiety, and time urgency.