View clinical trials related to Anxiety.
Filter by:This nonrandomized pilot study is investigating the efficacy of a modularized treatment for anxiety in children ages 3-7 years old. Eligibility is determined at a baseline assessment, followed by a second baseline assessment one month later. The treatment protocol, Parent-training Intervention for Preschoolers with Anxiety (PIPA), is flexible and allows for individualized treatments based on a treatment algorithm, ensuring that sessions address the most pressing clinical needs of each child. Treatment consists of weekly 60-minute sessions delivered over the course of 12 weeks. Symptom change is tracked weekly during brief phone assessments and a post-treatment assessment will occur following the final treatment session, approximately 12 weeks after starting treatment. Finally, all participants will complete two follow-up assessments, occurring 1-month and 6-months after the final treatment session.
Background. In Denmark, about 350,000 persons suffer from anxiety. Public health-care services plan to implement internet based self-help psychotherapy (IBT) to be an important alternative and supplement to ordinary face-to-face therapy. Meta-analyses indicate that the effect of IBT for anxiety disorders seems better than no intervention, and in some instances equal to 'usual therapy'. But studies have been characterised by small sample sizes, high risk for bias, including high dropout. Objective. The objective of this pilot trial is to assess the feasibility of conducting a larger confirmatory trial investigating the benefits and harms of an internet-based self-help therapy program, FearFighterâ„¢, compared with no intervention for persons with an anxiety disorder. Design. An investigator-initiated feasibility randomised clinical trial investigating internet-based therapy with FearFighterâ„¢ compared with no intervention for persons with an anxiety disorder. We will include 64 participants. Eligibility criteria. Inclusion criteria: age 18 or older; specific phobia, panic disorder, agoraphobia, or social phobia is the primary diagnosis according to the DSM-IV; and informed consent. Exclusion criteria: suicidal risk; ongoing episode of bipolar disorder or psychosis; concurrent psychological treatment for the anxiety disorder; unable to attend the intervention; or lack of informed consent. Intervention. The intervention group will use the program FearFighterâ„¢, a nine session cognitive behavioural self-help therapy program delivered over the internet during nine weeks. The control group receive no intervention for nine weeks. Outcomes. Feasibility outcomes are the fraction that are eligible, the fraction that are randomised, and the compliance in the intervention group. Clinical exploratory outcomes are: remission, Beck Anxiety Inventory, Symptom Check List-90R, WHO Well-Being Index, Sheehan Disability Scale, serious adverse events, and behaviour log from FearFighter. Time schedule. Participants will be included in the trial from July 2015. Results are expected in February 2016.
A total of 300 adults would be included in the present cross-sectional study. glycemic index (GI) and glycemic load (GL) would be assessed by using a validated self-administered dish-based semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire. Validated Iranian versions of Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale and General Health Questionnaire-12 would be used to assess anxiety, depression and psychological distress.
This research study will evaluate an integrated care model of telephone-based, computer-aided care management using a new role of Mental Health Technician and specialized software to support primary care providers in providing mental health care. The study will compare the effectiveness of this model vs. enhanced usual care in improving initiation of specific treatment by the primary care provider, reduction in severity of symptoms, and improvement in quality of life or functioning.
Preoperative Anxiety is a major problem in anesthesia management. Paediatric patients are a special group who need special attention. Some studies have shown that cartoons are a very good tool for distraction in the preoperative period for children. Our hypothesis is that children watching Cartoons in the preoperative period will have less anxiety and will be fit with preparation.
As there are no validated tools for assessing patient reported outcomes or health related quality of life in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), different studies have utilised different methods. This means that comparison of the outcomes of studies is difficult or inaccurate. By collecting different quality of life tools and patient reported outcome at the same time, it will be possible to map or model the results of one tool or groups of tools onto another. 250 patients with IPF will be asked to complete the EuroQoL 5D, Kings Brief Interstitial Lung Disease questionnaire, St George's Respiratory Questionnaire, MRC dyspnoea scale, University of California, San Diego shortness of breath questionnaire and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, along with spirometry every 3 months, and undergo a 6 minute walk test every 6 months, over a 12 month period. Prognostic models will be constructed from all the clinical (questionnaire and function) measures a linear regression model.
The objective of this research study is to show superiority of intranasal dexmedetomidine to intranasal midazolam as anxiolysis prior to pediatric laceration repairs.
Research in the last fifteen years suggests that anxious individuals selectively attend towards threatening information. Attention modification interventions for internalizing adults have been developed to target cognition at this basic level; these programs have demonstrated initial efficacy in attention bias and anxiety symptom reduction. To date, there have been minimal published studies of attention modification in youths with clinical levels of anxiety. This study is a large randomized efficacy-effectiveness trial (N = 498) to test the benefit of this low-cost, computerized attention modification intervention (Cognitive Bias Modification (CBM) computer application) for anxiety disorders and symptomatology in youth ages 12 to 17. This trial conducted will compare three intervention arms, all of which include underlying treatment as usual (TAU). The investigators directly test the level of clinical support ("scaffolding") needed to adequately deliver self-administered CBM to anxious youth, a finding that will be key to preparing for future deployment-focused trials. The investigators will compare an attention control version of the CBM program (Arm 1) to two active versions of the CBM intervention that have varying levels of patient clinical support: a self-administered CBM program that participants download and install on their home computers (Self-Administered CBM-only; Arm 2), and the same CBM program paired with an adherence promotion (AP) component delivered via brief telephone calls from study "coaches," including as needed, brief motivational enhancement and/or technical assistance (Self-Administered CBM+AP; Arm 3). The investigators expect that youth receiving CBM and CBM+AP will have improvement in anxiety symptoms and functioning. The investigators will also complete a cost-effectiveness analysis to examine potential costs offset by this intervention.
The primary endpoint of this study is to evaluate the prevalence of anxiety and depressive disorders, and their relationship with disease activity, in patients with rheumatoid arthritis treated with biological drugs
The proposed project will investigate the effects of probiotics on anxiety and associated psychological and physiological factors in humans. The therapeutic potential of probiotics for reducing anxiety and other factors associated with a disrupted microbiome will be assessed in a double-blind placebo-crossover design. Based on the research findings to date, it is hypothesized that probiotics will reduce anxiety and depressive symptoms.