View clinical trials related to Depression.
Filter by:Psychological distress and depression are common among young people living with HIV (Y-PLWH) and negatively impact medication adherence and disease control. In low- and middle-income countries, this problem is compounded by the lack of trained mental health professionals on the provider side and the requirement of frequent clinic-based visits imposing greater cost, inconvenience, and stigma for patients. Change My Story, is a theory-grounded, interactive narrative game designed to address the key drivers of depression and psychological distress among Y-PLWH in Nigeria. This pilot hybrid implementation-effectiveness randomized controlled trial (RCT) will compare Change My Story combined with PST to PST alone among 80 Y-PLWH with depression or psychological distress.
It is well established that any level of physical activity can help prevent and treat depression, with more strenuous activity having a greater effect. Understanding the mechanisms driving this antidepressant effect is important because it could allow exercise programmes to be made more effective, accessible, and targeted. Such knowledge could contribute to social prescribing, increasingly a priority for mental healthcare. Importantly, physical activity is highly scalable, low cost, well suited to early intervention, and has beneficial impacts on physical health co-morbidities. This trial may provide initial indications of whether there are sub-groups of depressed individuals who are particularly likely to benefit from physical activity, lead to strategies to personalise physical activity prescription based on motivational factors, and pave the way for augmentative approaches, for example combining physical activity with psychological interventions. To date the mechanisms driving the antidepressant effects of physical activity in humans are poorly understood. Building on links between depressive symptoms, reward processing and dopamine, plus evidence from animal studies that physical activity is anti-inflammatory and boosts both dopamine and reward processing, the overarching aim of this trial is to understand the mechanisms underlying the effects of physical activity in depression, focusing on the concept of motivation. The key objective is to conduct a randomised controlled trial (RCT) in N=250 depressed participants comparing aerobic exercise to a stretching/relaxation control condition, examining a range of mechanistic factors. The proposed trial will examine the impact of physical activity at multiple, linked potential levels of explanation: (1) immune-metabolic markers; (2) dopamine synthesis capacity; (3) activation in the brain's reward and effort processing circuitry;(4) effort-based decision making incorporating computational analysis; and (5) symptom networks based on fine-grained, daily measurements.
The Investigators propose to carry out a randomized, double-blind trial to compare the clinical efficacy of an individualized connectome-guided accelerated iTBS vs an anatomically-guided (Beam F3) accelerated iTBS. The study team will recruit both inpatients and outpatients who had been referred for TMS for the treatment of depression.
The goal of this randomised controlled trial is to enhance the Friendship Bench intervention with antidepressants in adults with moderate to severe depression. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. Is the combination of the Friendship Bench with nurse-led antidepressants prescribing superior to the Friendship Bench alone? 2. What are the barriers and enablers for the prescription of antidepressants by non-specialists in primary care? Type of study: Randomized controlled superiority trial Participants will be randomly selected and allocated into the control arm or intervention arm. Participants in the control arm will receive six sessions of the Friendship Bench Problem Solving Therapy while those in the intervention arm will receive the Friendship Bench intervention plus Fluoxetine (Sertraline for breastfeeding women).
Depression and anxiety are the most prevalent mental disorders among both the general population and young adults, and transdiagnostic treatments for these patients are mostly based on cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT). Based on common (transdiagnostic) principles of treatment (e.g., emotional exposure), these approaches have proliferated and demonstrated their efficacy in comparison to disorder-specific treatments. Although there are a few transdiagnostic approaches for children and adolescents, it was not possible to not find anyone targeting young people. For this reason, the investigators proposed the Identity-Based Transdiagnostic Therapy (IBTT) as a new treatment modality ideally created to address the challenge of improving the outcomes of psychotherapy for young adults with anxiety and/or depression. The IBTT is a psychological treatment for emotional disorders specifically designed for the youths in terms of their attitudes to treatment (attractiveness, engagement), and highly personalized to their construal of self and others. This project will allow testing the hypothesis that a novel brief psychotherapeutic intervention, IBTT, will be more efficacious in the treatment of the anxiety and/or depression of young adults than the well-established CBT-based Unified Protocol.
In this study, pregnant women were screened and managed for depression in three time windows: early pregnancy, mid-pregnancy, and late pregnancy. Pregnant women who screened positive for depression during pregnancy were dynamically enrolled in the study and stratified into randomized groups based on gestation period (early/mid/late) and randomly assigned to the intervention and control groups on a 1:1 basis. Pregnant women in the intervention group attended a three-week "mental fitness boot camp" and were assessed at 3 weeks, and if they still screened positive for depression, they were offered 4 times one-on-one counseling sessions by the obstetrician. The control group received routine care.
This study will explore the specific response characteristics of the niacin skin response test in the population with depressive disorder malinger. The investigators expect that depressive disorder malinger can be discriminated by the niacin skin reaction test.
Depression in neurocognitive disorders (Alzheimers' disease and related disoders) is a highly prevalent condition, especially in nursing homes. While it is associated with significant distress, the current conventional antidepressants have shown only modest efficacy and exposed to potentially severe side effects. Recent evidence suggests that nitrous oxide (N2O) in its most commonly used packaging of EMONO (Equimolar Mixture of Oxygen and Nitrous Oxide) has rapid antidepressant properties and a good safety profile. However, no study has investigating the antidepressant effect of EMONO in a population of depressed older adults with moderate to severe neurocognitive disorders in nursing homes. The principal goal of the PROTO-EHPAD study is to compare the changes in depressive symptoms in such individuals in a randomized controlled trial with a follow up period of 8 weeks, with a dosage escalation procedure.
The purpose of this study is to explore whether an implementation process composed of offering CR to staff in a single hospital nursing unit has any potential impact on unit-level quality measures post-implementation.
The goal of this randomized controlled trial is to test for evidence of dose-response effects in a sample of healthy adults with little to no prior experience with meditation. The main question it aims to answer is whether larger doses of mindfulness meditation yield greater positive changes in wellbeing than smaller doses. Our hypotheses are that (1) larger doses of mindfulness training will yield significantly larger effects, and (2) different doses will be significantly associated with variation in participant engagement, with lower engagement associated with higher doses. Researchers will compare each of three dose conditions, 10-min, 20-min, 30-min, against a minimal dose condition of 3-4 min. Participants will take a 28-day mindfulness meditation course, with guided audio instructions provided daily throughout the intervention period (excluding one rest day per week). They will also be asked to respond to surveys before, during, and after the intervention.