View clinical trials related to Depression.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to test the effectiveness of Open Door (previously known as the Treatment Initiation Program [TIP]), a brief psychosocial intervention to address the psychological barriers to care and improve the use of mental health services by depressed community elderly. The intervention is designed to help the older adult identify the barriers, problem-solve to find solutions and mobilize the motivation to seek help. Open Door was developed to work collaboratively with an older adult who is depressed to improve access and adherence to mental health treatment.
The purpose of this study is to determine how psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy respectively change brain activity in patients suffering from chronic depression.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of light therapy for the treatment of bipolar type II patients relapsing into a depressive phase during autumn or winter.
The overall goal of this study is to obtain detailed information that will allow a careful assessment of psychopathology, quality of life and eating behavior pre-surgically and at regular intervals for 2 years after the surgical intervention.
Objective: Chronic epidural cortical stimulation (ECS) involves the neurosurgical placement of an electric wire on the surface of the brain with intermittent activation. Over time, ECS modulates local and distal connected brain regions. It is being currently applied over the motor cortex to treat intractable pain. Because of the important role played by the medial prefrontal cortex in mood regulation, the goal of this study is to apply this minimally invasive neurostimulation modality over medial prefrontal cortex in severely ill depressed subjects who have failed all other attempts at treatment.
The ADAPt-C collaborative depression care model is designed to: improve depression symptom reduction in the intervention group over the modestly enhanced usual care group of low-income, predominantly Hispanic, patients with cancer who are receiving care in an urban public sector care system; and to improve quality of life outcomes among intervention patients over enhanced usual care.
The goal of this behavioral research study is to find a quick and effective way to identify depression in patients with ovarian, peritoneal, or fallopian tube cancer. Another goal of this study is to compare an intervention program with "enhanced" standard care to see which may be more effective in improving quality of life for these patients.
Primary Objectives: - Develop and pilot test an innovative intervention to determine its feasibility and acceptability to patients. Recruitment rate, patient satisfaction, attendance, questionnaire completion rates and the reliability and validity of the questionnaires will be assessed. - Conduct preliminary analyses on the efficacy of the intervention in improving patients' depression. Evaluate whether depression levels in patients receiving the intervention decreases, and whether the decrease is greater among those who complete more sessions. - Test the relationship between patients' depression levels and adherence to swallowing rehabilitation and to dental preventive maintenance regimens.
The purpose of this study is to conduct a randomized controlled trial of an 8-visit non-pharmacologic group intervention in reducing the severity of depressive symptoms in veterans who receive IFN and ribavirin for the treatment of Hepatitis C. We hypothesize that over the first 6 months of treatment with IFN and ribavirin for the 45 patients who receive the 8-visit intervention early in the course of treatment in addition to usual care (experimental group) will have lower scores on the CES-D, a standard depression rating scale, than the 45 patients who receive only usual care (control group).
Objectives: Primary Aim: To conduct a preliminary randomized trial in smokers with current recurrent major depressive disorder (MDD), current MDD with a single episode of 2 years or more, and current dysthymia comparing combined cognitive behavioral analysis system of psychotherapy (CBASP) and standard smoking cessation treatment (ST) (CBASP/ST) to combined Health Education and ST treatment (HE/ST) to: 1. Examine the effects of CBASP/ST on both short and long-term point prevalence abstinence Secondary Aims: 1. To test the hypothesis that depressed smokers in the CBASP/ST treatment will experience greater decreases in depressive symptoms from baseline to each of our follow-up assessment points, compared to depressed smokers in the HE/ST treatment, and; 2. That depressed smokers in the CBASP/ST treatment will experience greater improvements in psychosocial functioning from baseline to follow-up assessment points, compared to depressed smokers in the ST treatment. 3. To evaluate between subject neurophysiological predictors of abstinence at 3 and 6 months, and: 4. To evaluate within-subject changes in neurophysiological responses to emotional and smoking-related stimuli across treatment sessions, and the relation of these changes to abstinence and depressive symptoms at end of treatment, and 3- and 6-months.