View clinical trials related to Depressive Disorder.
Filter by:The proposed study is a one group pilot to assess the feasibility and acceptability of an 8-session intervention (STRONGer Together) for children between 8 - 12 years of age with asthma and anxiety/depressive symptoms.
This study will examine the feasibility and efficacy of lifestyle medicine for the enhancement of psychological wellness in adult. The main components of lifestyle intervention typically include physical activity, diet, relaxation/mindfulness, sleep and socialisation. These components are weaved with psychological elements such as stress management, cognitive restructuring, motivational interviewing, and goal setting strategies that are led by clinical psychologists. While lifestyle medicine has been recognised for centuries a a mean to improve physical health, the field of lifestyle medicine in the context of mental health is still in its infancy. Nevertheless, there is increasing evidence demonstrating the efficacy of individual components of lifestyle medicine (e.g. diet, physical activities, and sleep) on mood and stress management. With a well-researched lifestyle medicine programme adopted from Australia, the research team of the Chinese University of Hong Kong has customised the intervention protocol to fit the Chinese culture. The investigators aim to examine the effectiveness of an integration of multiple lifestyle adjustments on depression from a holistic body-mind perspective.
A hybrid effectiveness-efficacy trial to evaluate a stepped care task shifted intervention to treat depression and HIV medication nonadherence in low resource settings in rural Zimbabwe.
This study investigates how brains change as a result of a treatment for depression called repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS). People who receive rTMS will have pictures of their brains and brain activity taken by a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanner before and after their treatment, as well as up to three times during the six-week treatment course. These images will be examined to see if the rTMS is placed correctly to help treat their symptoms, and what changes in brain activity are happening during the rTMS treatment
To evaluate the clinical efficacy of online cognitive behavioural therapy supplemented with online neurocognitive remediation therapy to improve mood and cognition, decrease relapse rates and optimise work and occupational functioning.
The main goal is to design, develop and evaluate a personalized intervention to prevent the onset of depression based on Information and Communications Technology (ICTs), risk predictive algorithms and decision support systems (DSS) for patients and general practitioners (GPs). The specific goals are 1) to design and develop a DSS, called e-predictD-DSS, to elaborate personalized plans to prevent depression; 2) to design and develop an ICT solution that integrates the DSS on the web, a mobile application (App), the risk predictive algorithm, different intervention modules and a monitoring-feedback system; 3) to evaluate the usability and adherence of primary care patients and their GPs with the e-predictD intervention; 4) to evaluate the effectiveness of the e-predictD intervention to reduce the incidence of major depression, depression and anxiety symptoms and the probability of major depression next year; 5) to evaluate the cost-effectiveness and cost-utility of the e-predictD intervention to prevent depression. Methods: This is a randomized controlled trial with allocation by cluster (GPs), simple blind, two parallel arms (e-predictD vs "active m-Health control") and 1 year follow-up including 720 patients (360 in each arm) and 72 GPs (36 in each arm). Patients will be free of major depression at baseline and aged between 18 and 55 years old. Primary outcome will be the incidence of major depression at 12 months measured by CIDI. As secondary outcomes: depressive and anxiety symptomatology measured by PHQ-9 and GAD-7 and the risk probability of depression measured by predictD algorithm, as well as cost-effectiveness and cost-utility. The e-predictD intervention is multi-component and it is based on a DSS that helps the patients to elaborate their own personalized depression prevention plans, which the patient approves, and implements, and the system monitors offering feedback to the patient and to the GPs. It is an e-Health intervention because it is based on a web and m-Health because it is also implemented on the patient's smartphones through an App. In addition, it integrates a risk algorithm of depression, which is already validated (the predictD algorithm). It also includes an initial GP-patient interview and a specific training for the GP. Finally, a map of potentially useful local community resources to prevent depression will be integrated into the DSS.
This study evaluates an accelerated schedule of theta-burst stimulation using a transcranial magnetic stimulation device for treatment-resistant bipolar depression. In this open-label study, all participants will receive accelerated theta-burst stimulation.
This pilot study will test whether depression symptoms and cognitive functioning are impacted by internet-delivered mindfulness training following the principles of mindfulness meditation. The population is adults ages 65+ experiencing a current major depressive episode. Participants will receive an approximate 10-week instruction in mindfulness meditation, provided remotely through internet. Outcomes are depressive symptoms, assessed via clinical interview and self-report, and cognitive function, assessed via smartphone-delivered cognitive tests and surveys. The total duration of participation is approximately 18 weeks.
This early-stage trial aims to examine the feasibility, tolerability, and safety of Floatation-REST (Reduced Environmental Stimulation Therapy) or an active comparison condition in 75 participants with clinical anxiety and depression.
Cluster randomized controlled trial to compare the effects of task-shifted, evidence-based depression care vs. usual care on adherence to each step of the prevention of mother-to-child-transmission (PMTCT) care cascade at 8 antenatal care (ANC) clinics in Uganda.