View clinical trials related to Depressive Symptoms.
Filter by:One in eleven adults falls ill with Diabetes Mellitus (DM) and 90% of them suffered from type 2 DM. Depression in type 2 DM patients had a big impact, acting as a major barrier to self-care in type 2 DM patients. Depression in diabetes patients is also associated with decreasing quality of life. Poor self-care behavior and adherence, poor glycemic control, and increased risk of mortality about 36-38% from cardiovascular complications are other known debilitating results. Vitamin D receptors are present in many organ systems, namely the pancreas, intestine, musculoskeletal, and nervous systems. Vitamin D has pleiotropic effects, which were seen from its mechanism as an anti-inflammatory, anti-apoptotic, and immunomodulatory agent. Based on the mechanism of Vitamin D action in the nervous system, which also plays a role in depression pathogenesis, vitamin D is hypothesized to have a beneficial effect on depression, both for depression prevention and treatment. Few studies denote that Vitamin D can improve depression in type 2 DM patients. Vitamin D may become an important adjuvant therapy to ameliorate depression in type 2 DM patients. These clinical trials concerning vitamin D in type 2 DM are relevant, reminding that type 2 DM resulted in higher morbidity, mortality, and numerous high-risk complications in the population.
The purpose of the CROP study is to investigate the potential to cultivate psychological resources and resilience in childhood cancer patients and their family members using a mobile phone-based intervention. The feasibility study aims to evaluate the implementation and participant experience of the digital intervention and register psychological outcome measures preliminary evidence for its acceptability, feasibility, and potential beneficial effects.
The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, and the associated government-imposed isolationary lockdowns, has led to a mental health crisis on a global scale. Empirical studies have reported a drastic increase in mental health problems, such as depression and anxiety, increased loneliness and feelings of disconnectedness from others, while resilience levels have been negatively affected, indicating an urgent need for intervention. The current study study is embedded in a larger study, the CovSocial study (www.covsocial) which focused in its first phase on evaluating the longitudinal changes in vulnerability, resilience and social cohesion during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. The present second phase of this CovSocial study will seek to investigate the efficacy of brief online mindfulness-based and socio-emotional interventions in reducing mental health problems, and enhancing psychological resilience, social competencies and social cohesion. After providing informed consent, participants will be assigned to one of three groups: 1) socio-emotional training group (with Affect Dyads as core exercise), 2) mindfulness-based mental training group (with attention-based mindfulness practices such as Breathing Meditation as core practice), or 3) Retest Control Group (waitlist control).All groups will first undergo a pre-intervention testing phase (pre-test) wherein they will provide a comprehensive baseline measurement which covers psychometric measures (such as questionnaires and behavioral tasks), and biological parameters (saliva samples). During the 10-week intervention period, participants will undergo weekly assessments and daily Ecological Momentary Assessment pre and post the daily exercise practice, using self-report scales and questionnaires delivered through a webapp or mobile app. At the end of the intervention, participants will again undergo an assessment of psychometric measures and biological parameters, same as at pre-intervention time (post-test). In a second portion, the waitlist control group will undergo the socio-emotional intervention and will be tested at post-test II again. Results will reveal the effectiveness of brief online interventions in enhancing mental health and social cohesion outcomes. In addition to examining pre-post intervention-related changes, we will also use the data from the phase 1 of the project to evaluate the impact of trait markers of and the longitudinal changes in vulnerability, resilience and social cohesion on the intervention-related changes in markers of vulnerability, resilience and social cohesion. We will also evaluate the predictive impact of genetic markers of vulnerability, resilience and social cohesion (assessed in phase 1) on intervention-related changes in our variables of interest. The present study will serve as a pilot for future application of scalable, low-cost interventions at a broader level to reduce stress, improve mental health and build resilience in the face of global stressors.
There is considerable need for psychological intervention targeting stressor-related mental health symptoms related to COVID-19. The investigators have developed an online self-directed transdiagnostic intervention to address this need called RESTORE: Recovering from Extreme Stressors Through Online Resources and E-health. The specific aims of this project are to refine and investigate the feasibility, initial safety, and efficacy of RESTORE for addressing mental health symptoms in first responders, health care workers (HCW), and Canadian Armed Forces members exposed to COVID-19-related traumatic or extreme stressors.
The Jockey Club Holistic Support Project for Elderly Mental Wellness (JC JoyAge) has developed and implemented a collaborative stepped care model for older persons at-risk of or with depression in four districts in Hong Kong since 2015 (Clinical Trials Identifier: NCT03593889). Results from JC JoyAge show that the collaborative stepped-care model is effective in improving older persons' mental wellness, and the specialised training and engagement of Peer Supporters are effective in building capacity in the community. The proposed impact extension programme lasts for four years (from 2020 to 2023), and the overall goal is to expand the JC JoyAge model to all 18 districts in Hong Kong, to provide integrated and evidence-based mental health services to older adults with subclinical depressive symptoms, with the hope of model adoption in regular service upon project completion.
The purpose of the present study is to evaluate the changes on mental and physical health deriving from a blended intervention merging psychological intervention aimed at increasing activity and exercise with a personalised exercise program based on medical assessment on subjects suffering from mild to moderate depressive symptoms irrespective of diagnostic entity, by comparing two experimental groups (A. Personalised exercise group program+ app with motivational messages + fitness tracker or B. Personalised exercise group program+ app with no motivational messages + fitness tracker) and a control group (app with no motivational messages +fitness tracker). This study also introduces the use of a wearable device to collect information regarding physical activity and sleep patterns to provide motivational messages. The investigators hypothesise that participation in a brief app-blended group intervention -on top of usual care- promoting personalised exercise and activity will improve functioning and well-being of participants, as well as motivate them to increase their physical activity and enhance behavioural changes towards a healthier lifestyle when compared to general exercise prescriptions. In addition, the investigators hypothesise that amongst patients who had been allocated to the intervention conditions, those presenting better commitment to prescribed personalised exercise plans (understood as more than a 70% compliance of prescribed exercise, measured by objective movement data collected by a fitness tracker) will show a higher functionality improvement.
This paper describes the rationale and design of a Phase 3 RCT comparing Transcendental Meditation to Present Centered Therapy for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), suicidal ideation, alcohol use, and depressive symptoms in Veterans. In this multisite trial, 450 Veterans meeting Diagnostic and Statistical Manual-5 (DSM-5) criteria for PTSD will be recruited from nine VA and academic medical center sites across the U.S. Study outcomes include changes in PTSD diagnosis and symptom severity (primary), suicidal ideation, alcohol use, and depressive symptoms. Participation includes baseline testing and post-treatment assessments at 12, 24, and 36-weeks. During each assessment visit, Veterans will complete diagnostic interviews, including the Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale for DSM-5 and the Alcohol Timeline Followback, as well as validated self-report measures. Cost-effectiveness of the treatments will be measured using intervention and healthcare costs, the proportion with PTSD diagnosis removed, and Quality-Adjusted Life Years. Finally, single-site substudies will examine pre-to-post-treatment changes in PTSD biomarkers and on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
The project is aimed at children who are exposed to the toxic psychosocial stress present in their mothers during pregnancy or after childbirth. Due to psychosocial stress in their mothers, these children are at risk of developing a mental disorder or having impaired psychosocial development. In Czechia, there is no prevention of psychosocial stress in women, which also plays a preventive role in the development of mental disorders in their children. Mental disorders in parents are stigmatized in Czechia, which prevents parents from seeking care. The investigators want to change this situation, so they will: 1. create and pilot a screening program for psychosocial stress in perinatal women in gynecological clinics 2. connect the screening program to the integrated step care system created by the investigators, including peer support, which the investigators will test
Emotional disorders (anxiety and/or depression) are severely undiagnosed and untreated despite being among the most common mental disorders, particularly at a young age. Half of all mental disorders begin by age 14; three-quarters by age 24, which makes adolescence a particularly crucial stage. In adolescence, prodromal signs of mental disorders and even full-blown clinical conditions often remain undetected, undiagnosed and untreated. However, there is an absence of evidence-based protocols to reach at-risk youth for developing emotional disorders. There is an urgent need for a paradigm shift by developing intervention protocols to early identify and treat at-risk adolescents, thus preventing them from developing severe mental disorders later on in life. Mental health selective prevention is key to helping at-risk adolescents thrive before emotional disorder evolves. To cover this gap, PROCARE is conceptualized as a modularized selective preventive programme for adolescents aged 12 to 18 years. Using personalized medicine approach, PROCARE will allow to tailor intervention protocols according to the particular needs of an individual, but also to identify vulnerable people according to risk factors. Adolescents will be stratified based on risk and resilience status and allocated to a 3-arm intervention trial, delivered as a group, face-to-face or telehealth format, depending on Covid19 restrictions imposed by government. By the very first time, PROCARE as selective intervention for at-risk adolescents will deliver specific add-on modules to tackle risk factors evidenced by adolescents, along with a core intervention. The PROCARE protocol aims to reduce the effect of risk factors and enhance protective factors that will eventually lead to lasting positive effects for adolescents. PROCARE will combine quantitative analysis, with special attention to vulnerable groups in a sex/gender disaggregated way. The PROCARE project is expected to have a far impact ultimately contributing to preventing and reducing the prevalence of mental disorders in the young. The outcomes of PROCARE will contribute to identifying and treating adolescents at risk for emotional mental at an early stage, before they incur personal, societal and economic cost. PROCARE will be culturally-adapted and implemented as a multicenter Randomized-Controlled Trial (RCT). PROCARE will be designed to be an acceptable, scalable, and sustainable selective prevention program.
A randomized control trial examining the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of providing access to the MindShift CBT mobile app via tablet for acute psychiatric inpatients.