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Child Behavior Disorders clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Child Behavior Disorders.

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NCT ID: NCT06241300 Recruiting - Executive Function Clinical Trials

Executive Function and Parenting in Childhood

EPIC
Start date: November 20, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Deficits in executive functioning (EF) disproportionately impact children living in poverty and increase risk for psychopathology, particularly disruptive behavior disorders. This randomized clinical trial seeks to determine whether childhood EF, assessed across neural and behavioral units of analysis, is an experimental therapeutic target that can be directly modified through caregiver participation in the Chicago Parent Program (CPP), if increases in EF predict reduced disruptive behavior trajectories in low-income children over a short-term follow-up period, and identify which CPP-driven parenting skill improvements are the most influential in modifying EF. This work will contribute new knowledge as to whether a cost-efficient parenting intervention, developed for and with low-income families raising young children in poverty, can modify EF, a neural behavioral mechanism implicated in risk for childhood disruptive behavior problems.

NCT ID: NCT06087302 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Behavior Disorders in Children

Effectiveness of Child-Parent Relationship Therapy (CPRT)

Start date: May 23, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Exposure to trauma during childhood contributes to behavioral and attachment difficulties in children. The current research study will be conducted on the effectiveness of child-parent relationship therapy (CPRT) on psychological distress and family functioning among parents of children exposed to trauma. The CPRT is an evidence-based intervention parenting program that gives training to the parents, to help children who have social, emotional, attachment, and behavioral difficulties. A CPRT would train parents with the principles of CCPT and provide them with the ability to support their children. A randomized controlled trial will validate the effect of CPRT on family functioning, and parental psychological distress among parents of children exposed to trauma. It will be an interventional-based study on CPRT with a pre-posttest experimental design. The current study would be conducted in Islamabad and Rawalpindi, after obtaining permission from the appropriate authorities, for collecting data from the educated mothers/caretakers as a research sample. There would be inclusive and exclusive selection criteria for the sample. A study will be conducted in four ways, firstly, the need assessment will be conducted with phenomenological research design from selected educated mothers/caretakers on the KAP model (knowledge, attitudes, and practices) categories about the CPRT, and psychological distress on family functioning among parents of children exposed to trauma. In phase two, the pilot study will be conducted to assess the accuracy of measures for the sample and the effectiveness of CPRT. In phase three, a cross-sectional survey would measure the study variables. The fourth phase will be the intervention phase for validation of CPRT therapeutic techniques in the Pakistani population a randomized controlled trial design will be applied to analyze the effect of CPRT on study variables in the next phase (main study). The measures Child-Parent Relationship Scale, depression, anxiety, and stress scale, family assessment device, and disruptive behavior through Children's Behavior Questionnaire (very short form) parental-version will be used to collection the data from study participants. The Child and Adolescent Trauma Screen would be used as a screening inventory. The CPRT intervention therapeutic sessions will continue based on the inclusive and exclusive selection criteria. The data will be evaluated through SPSS (latest version).

NCT ID: NCT05637320 Recruiting - Anxiety Disorders Clinical Trials

Big Feelings: A Study on Children's Emotions in Therapy

Start date: October 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn about how psychotherapy works for children and adolescents aged 8 - 15 with anxiety, depression, trauma, or disruptive behaviour. The main question it aims to answer is: • Is the biobehavioural regulation of negative emotion a transdiagnostic mechanism of treatment response in psychotherapy for children with anxiety, depression, trauma and/or disruptive behaviour? Children and their parents will be randomly assigned to an evidence-based, transdiagnostic treatment (the Modular Approach to Therapy for Children with Anxiety, Depression, Trauma, and Conduct Problems; MATCH-ADTC) or a waitlist control condition. Participants in both groups will complete a baseline assessment, weekly measures consisting of brief symptom scales and medication tracking, and quarterly assessments every 3 months. Following the intervention/waitlist period, our team will conduct post-test assessments. All assessments, except for the weekly surveys, will consist of symptom scales, clinical interviews, experimental tasks and physiological measures.

NCT ID: NCT05525962 Recruiting - Child Development Clinical Trials

Vulnerability/Resilience Factors Influencing the Developmental Trajectories and Adaptive Methods of Children and Adolescents in Child Welfare System.

EvolASE-PEA
Start date: September 29, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Assess the prevalence of medico-psychological characteristics at the time of placement (M0), their appearance / disappearance and during the two years following placement (M12 and M24) by age group in children / adolescents in Child Protective Services and placed full-time in the structures of Seine-Maritime and Eure as well as in nursery in Le Havre or Rouen

NCT ID: NCT05262088 Recruiting - Cerebral Palsy Clinical Trials

Prognostic Value of Generalized Movements in the Diagnosis of Neurological Diseases in Children

Start date: January 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

To study of the evolution of general movements in children, to develop criteria for early diagnosis of neurological disorders to reduce early neurological disability. It is observational longitudinal analytical cohort study.

NCT ID: NCT05206708 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Parent-Child Relations

Assesment of the Efficacy of Personalized Parent-child Psychotherapy in Children Under 3 Years Old

ECRIN
Start date: February 28, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to assess the efficacy at 4 months of a personalized strategy comparatively to a standard Psychodynamic Integrative Therapy, on childrens' symptom improvment

NCT ID: NCT05040542 Recruiting - Brain Development Clinical Trials

The Brain Mechanism of Social Emotion and Communication in Infants Aged 0 to 6 Years

Start date: August 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study explores the relationship between brain development and infants' social emotion and communication ability, as well as the role of genetic factors in it.To provide a theoretical basis for precise intervention of infants' social emotion and communication problems and the overall improvement of brain development.

NCT ID: NCT03910491 Recruiting - Parenting Clinical Trials

Positive Parenting Program in Foster Care

Start date: April 16, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of the study is to evaluate early implementation outcomes of a positive parenting program, Child Adult Relationship Enhancement in Primary Care (PriCARE), in the foster care setting and to assess the efficacy of PriCARE in promoting positive parenting and increasing empathy among foster caregivers.

NCT ID: NCT03300713 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Depression, Postpartum

MOther-Child Interaction Assessment TRAINING for Pediatricians

MOCITRAINING
Start date: December 2, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The originality of the MOCITRAINING study lies in the integration of infant and maternal care during the pediatric consultation and the assessment of the impact of this type of care in the short and medium term on The MOCITRAINING program could contribute to improving the quality of parent-child interactions.