View clinical trials related to Depression.
Filter by:The main objective of this project will be to verify if the insertion of diaphragmatic, cardiorespiratory and strength breathing exercises and cooperative sports activities in Physical Education classes, during a period of 12 weeks, may be able to modify the scores of symptoms of anxiety and depression in adolescent students. As secondary objectives, this project will seek to verify which of the interventions will provide the greatest reductions in students' anxiety and depression symptoms, as well as analyze their effects on other health indicators, also verifying if a greater volume of sessions can provide additional benefits to mental health. when compared to a smaller volume. This is an experimental study, of the randomized clinical trial (RCT) type. The target population will be adolescent students (14 to 19 years old) from the Federal Institute Sul-rio-grandense (IFSul) on the Bagé and Pelotas campuses. A total of 16 classes will compose the sample. The classes that have the Physical Education (PE) curriculum component in their schedule will be listed and randomized in relation to the comparator group (CG) and to the three different intervention protocols: diaphragmatic breathing exercises (intervention group 1 or GI-1), physical exercises cardiorespiratory and strength activities (intervention group 2 or GI-2) and cooperative sports activities (intervention group 3 or GI-3). The application of these interventions will occur during PE classes, twice a week at Campus Bagé and three times a week at Campus Pelotas. Interventions will last 15 minutes in groups GI-1 and GI-2, and 20 minutes in GI-3. Before the start of the intervention, baseline assessments will be carried out, consisting of primary outcomes (symptoms of anxiety and depression) and secondary outcomes (self-concept, quality of life, sleep indicators, self-perception of physical fitness, cognitive failures, strength and cardiorespiratory fitness). The groups will be compared regarding the characteristics collected at baseline and after the 12th week of intervention. The Generalized Estimating Equations (GEE) and the post-hoc Bonferroni test will be used to compare the moments (pre and post-intervention) between the groups and to identify the group*moment interaction. Analyzes will be performed by protocol and by intention to treat. The significance coefficient adopted will be p<0.05.
The main purpose of this clinical trial is to evaluate the clinical efficacy and safety of adjuvant intervention therapy software for depression in patients with mild to moderate depression
Depression is a leading cause of disability worldwide and is more commonly seen in individual's post-spinal cord injury (SCI) than in the general population. Depression post-SCI impacts an individuals' quality of life and recovery. It has been reported that among Veterans with an SCI, those without depression live longer than those with depression. Thus, depression must be treated appropriately. Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) is an FDA-approved treatment for depression, but dosing is based on a motor response or movement in the thumb. Over half of individuals with SCI have some degree of arm or hand impairment, so these individuals might not be eligible for rTMS, or they may receive the wrong dose. This study proposes clinical trial in individuals with depression post-SCI to assess the anti-depressant effect of a novel technique to dose rTMS that does not require a motor response in the thumb. By gaining a better understanding of the application of rTMS for depression post-SCI, the investigators aim to advance the rehabilitative care of Veterans.
The POKAL-PSY project is a study that monitors participants for five years. The goal of the study is to identify distinguishable subtypes of depression on the basis of biomarkers and to gain insight into their prognostic significance.
Depression is a leading cause of disability worldwide and poses a large economic burden in the UK. There is evidence that exercise is beneficial in the management of depression and NICE now recommends group exercise programs as a treatment for people with mild and moderate-severe depression. Research shows that patients with severe depression are less likely to engage in exercise than patients with mild to moderate depression. There is little evidence, however, on the barriers and drivers to participation in such programs experienced by patients with depression; leading to uncertainty in the most effective way to implement these programs. We aim to analyse accounts of patients who have been referred to or participated in the Exercise Recovery Group (ERG), a group exercise program at the Nottingham Specialist Depression Service (NSDS). The NSDS is a tertiary unit where referred patients have suffered moderate-severe, persistent clinical depression. Eligible participants will be patients with persistent major depression who have agreed to referral to the ERG at the NSDS and who are able to provide informed consent. Participants will undergo a one-off 60 minute meeting via MS Teams, including an in-depth semi-structured interview on their experience as well as self-completion questionnaires assessing demographics, depression, anxiety and shame. Transcripts of the interviews will be subject to qualitative thematic analysis addressing questions on barriers and drivers of exercise treatment in depression; and the perceived impact of an exercise group on the individual participating. Themes will be developed to give an account of these questions, supported by anonymised quotes from the transcripts. The questionnaire data (on demographics, depression, anxiety, shame) will be used to characterise the group, in order to help assess directness of the evidence provided for other clinical populations; ultimately helping clinicians to implement exercise groups for depression that are acceptable for patients.
There are many common pharmacological treatments for major depression disorder (MDD), however the efficacy of these drugs often fails in severe cases. Intravenous (IV) administered ketamine may offer the potential for remission of the symptoms in patients with MDD; however it has not yet been approved by FDA for this purpose. This study will make use of an electroencephalography (EEG) machine to measure the brain's activity and response while the IV ketamine is being delivered. The objective of this study is to characterize the change in EEG response of patients with MDD, during and 4 weeks after a course of IV ketamine infusions.
Depression and anxiety are common mental health problems among adolescents worldwide. In Hong Kong, one in every four secondary school students reports clinical-level depression or anxiety symptoms. Extant research has found that a fixed mindset on intelligence and emotions and failure-is-debilitating belief are closely related to more depression and anxiety symptoms, hopelessness, and suicidality. At the same time, recent research also points to the importance of parental mindset. Parents are the primary social support of adolescents; parental belief systems can strongly influence children's affect, behaviour, and mental health. However, the effects of parent-child mindset interventions on a child's internalising problems have not yet been empirically examined. As emerging evidence has shown the promise of single-session interventions in reducing and preventing youth internalising problems, this project develops and examines a parent and child single-session intervention on mindsets of intelligence, failure, and emotion (PC-SMILE) - to tackle depression and anxiety in young people and promote parental well-being. Using a three-arm randomised controlled trial, the proposed study will examine the effectiveness of PC-SMILE on reducing depression and anxiety symptoms among children, enhancing well-being and parent-child relationships. A total of 549 parent-child dyads will be recruited from six secondary schools and randomly assigned to either the PC-SMILE intervention group, the C-SMILE intervention group, or the no-intervention waitlist control group. The intervention is approximately 45 minutes in length. In the PC-SMILE group, both parent and child will receive intervention, and their mental health and family relationship will be assessed at three time points: baseline before intervention (T1), within two weeks post-intervention (T2), and three months post-intervention (T3). In the C-SMILE group, only the child will undergo intervention, while both the child and parent will be required to complete the repeated assessments. A pilot test (n = 9) has supported the feasibility and acceptability of the PC-SMILE intervention. We hypothesise that compared to the waitlist control group, the PC-SMILE intervention group and C-SMILE group will significantly improve child depression and anxiety (primary outcome) and significantly improve secondary outcomes, including children's academic self-efficacy, hopelessness, psychological well-being, and parent-child interactions and relationships, and PC-SMILE group is more effective than C-SMILE group. The intention-to-treat principle and linear-regression-based maximum likelihood multi-level models will be used for data analysis. As of May 2024, we enrolled 75 students and their parents in the study. This study will not only provide evidence on parent-child growth mindset intervention for adolescent internalising problems but can also serve as a scalable and accessible intervention for improving the well-being of young people and their parents.
This study seeks to evaluate and compare the effectiveness of a mobile phone application-based intervention in improving wellbeing in young adults. 400 University students are randomized into 1 of 4 intervention types. Pre, mid and post-intervention outcome measures are compared to determine effectiveness of the various intervention types.
This research programme seeks to combine the resources of NHS primary care, with the leading spectroscopic work in low-magnetic fields of the Wilson Group (Nottingham Trent University) to demonstrate the potential for benchtop Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy in human clinical pathology. This is an instrument assessment study for point of care viability which will also result in enhanced patient care (pending their consent) in blood screenings and metabolic health data.
The present research project aims to compare the efficacy and safety of an intervention based on a smartphone application, which uses CBT techniques, to online group cognitive behavioral therapy (CBCT), in improving depressive symptoms. The project also has supplemental analysis to predict who will respond to the CBT intervention using the application. For this analysis, machine learning algorithms, a set of techniques from the field of artificial intelligence, will be used to create a predictive calculator for response to interventions. The analysis protocol used for this analysis will be in accordance with that proposed in task Force of the International Society for Bipolar Disorders.