View clinical trials related to Depressive Symptoms.
Filter by:The purpose of the study is to test an experimental method, a text-messaging app called B-RESILIENT, for improving participants' mood. B-RESILIENT is a text messaging app adaptation of a Resiliency Course, developed by community members known as Building Resiliency and Community Hope.
This project will be a randomised controlled trial to investigate the effectiveness of an integrated programme by using social art activity (SA) and exercise, for instance, Qigong (QG, a traditional Chinese exercise) as a therapeutic medium. This integrated programme aims to increase the well-being and reduce the depressive symptoms that are frequently ascertained in older people who live in nursing homes. The combination of SA and QG might be more beneficial to older people than either individual activity on its own, given that they are addressing different areas of functioning. The art activity focuses on self-expression in non-verbal activity using fine motor movement, whereas physical exercise like Qigong focuses on awareness of breathing and a calm state of mind. This is to help the older person achieve mental and physical relaxation by using gross motor movement. When the interventions are combined by utilising Qigong ahead of the art activities (thus, including both fine and gross motor movements) older people will reach a state of mental and physical relaxation, and moreover, will be able to express their feelings more simply in the social art activities.
Evaluate the efficacy of Project UPLIFT for reducing symptoms of depression and anxiety among African Americans at immediate posttest and after 3 months.
Rural African Americans are disproportionately impacted by social stressors that place them at risk for experiencing elevated depressive symptoms. This project will test the effectiveness of a culturally adapted behavioral activation intervention (REJOICE) for use within rural African American churches. Further, this project will gather data on strategies necessary to promote the successful implementation of this intervention within rural African American churches.
This study will be an 8-week open-label pilot study examining subjective and objective changes in mood, anxiety, cognition, and sleep before and after the introduction of a probiotic supplement containing Lactobacillus helveticus and Bifidobacterium longum in 10 treatment-naïve participants diagnosed with major depressive disorder (MDD). In order to examine the full composition of the micro biome, the investigators will also be collecting and analyzing fecal samples as well as blood samples to examine changes in plasma levels of inflammatory markers, 5-HT, and tryptophan in order to look at possible underlying mechanisms of any changes seen.
Brain Tumour (BT) survivors struggle with disabling physical, emotional, cognitive and psychosocial sequelae. Unfortunately, to-date there has been very limited research into rehabilitative interventions for this population. With 55,000 BT survivors in Canada alone1, access to effective, evidence-based rehabilitative treatment that would improve BT survivors' quality of life (QOL) and capacity to cope is a necessity. Mindfulness-Based Therapy's (MBTs) are emerging as a potential treatment to address this need. MBTs are group-based psychological treatments for coping with illness or disability, with the goal of improving psychological wellbeing. Recent studies have begun to suggest a role for MBTs in addressing symptom burden and QOL in the acquired brain injury (ABI) population, a heterogeneous population that includes survivors of stroke and traumatic brain injury, as well as BT survivors. High quality research including within-subject controlled trials, are needed to demonstrate whether MBTs can provide efficacious, accessible and cost-effective treatment to improve the lives of BT survivors.
The purpose of this study is to perform an efficacy study of Personal Construct Therapy, which focuses on the construction of self and others, for women diagnosed with fibromyalgia who have also comorbid depressive symptoms. To that aim, it will be compared with Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, which is an already well-established treatment in this area.
The purpose of this study is to conduct a two-arm effectiveness trial in Cape Town, South Africa of a Xhosa-adapted, nurse-delivered, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) treatment for depression and adherence, integrated into the HIV care setting in patients with HIV who did not achieve viral suppression from first-line treatment. The CBT treatment will be compared to enhanced usual care (Enhanced Treatment As Usual - ETAU) on study endpoints (as described in study endpoints section below).
This randomised controlled trial evaluates a cognitive-behavioural intervention for diabetes patients with suboptimal glycaemic control and comorbid depressive symptoms and/or diabetes distress. The main outcome is the improvement of suboptimal glycaemic control (HbA1c). Secondary outcomes are effects on depressive symptoms, diabetes distress, self-care behaviour, diabetes acceptance and quality of life. The treatment group will be treated with a cognitive-behavioural group treatment comprising specific interventions to improve glycaemic control and reduce diabetes distress as well as depressive symptoms. The control group will receive treatment-as-usual. A total of 212 study participants will be included. A secondary study objective is to analyse associations of suboptimal glycaemic control, depressive symptoms and diabetes distress with inflammatory markers.
Chronic insomnia may contribute to the development and exacerbation of heart failure (HF), incident mortality and contributes to common and disabling symptoms (fatigue, dyspnea, anxiety, depression, excessive daytime sleepiness, and pain) and decrements in objective and subjective functional performance. The purposes of the study are to evaluate the sustained effects of CBT-I on insomnia severity, sleep characteristics, daytime symptoms, and functional performance over twelve months among patients who have stable chronic HF and chronic insomnia. The effects of the treatment on outcomes of HF (hospitalization, death) and costs of the treatment will also be examined. A total of 200 participants will be randomized to 4 bi-weekly group sessions of cognitive behavioral therapy for CBT-I (behavioral was to improve insomnia and sleep) or HF self-management education. Participants will complete wrist actigraph (wrist-watch like accelerometer) measures of sleep, diaries, reaction time, and 6 minute walk test distance. They will also complete self-report measures of insomnia, sleep, symptoms, and functional performance. In addition the effects on symptoms and function over a period of one year.