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Wellbeing clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT02451878 Completed - Wellbeing Clinical Trials

Improving Social Anxiety Symptoms (SocWell)

SocWell
Start date: May 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators will test the value of an internet self-help package (E-Couch) for alleviating social anxiety symptoms in the general population. The investigators will undertake a trial of about 2000 participants to compare the effect of the E-Couch intervention compared to a wait-list control condition. Over a period of 12 months the investigators will measure the effect of using E-Couch self-help on social anxiety symptoms, as well as on mental wellbeing, and other secondary outcomes including quality of life, depression and general anxiety, and their use of other sources of help.

NCT ID: NCT01982981 Completed - Wellbeing Clinical Trials

Instrument Design and Validation to Asses the Perception of Wellbeing Associated to Plain Water.

Start date: March 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Nowadays, it is common to ingest beverages other than plain water, which range from flavored with a low energy input to others of high input. In Mexico, flavored beverage ingestion is believed to be displacing plain water; this phenomenon is raising concern in the health sector, due to the relation between flavored beverage intake and the increase in obesity and, consequently, chronic diseases. Up until now, there is no instrument available to characterize the perception of the Mexican population's well-being, beliefs and knowledge regarding plain water ingestion, nor is there an instrument capable of quantifying the daily water ingestion. The purpose of this study is design and validate a questionnaire to identify and evaluate the perception of well-being (PWBQ) related to plain water consumption in a sample of adult men and women of the city of Cuernavaca.

NCT ID: NCT01857830 Completed - Stress Clinical Trials

The Relaxation vs. Retreat Study

R&R
Start date: April 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this research study is to examine whether a short term meditation intervention can improve health, mood, and biological markers of cellular stress and aging in novice and experienced meditators compared to controls.