View clinical trials related to Emotional Dysfunction.
Filter by:This study is an open trial designed specifically to address the need for evidence-based treatment delivered via telehealth to individuals that are currently struggling with mental health issues during the COVID-19 pandemic, with the overarching goal of helping residents of New York adversely impacted by the pandemic to effectively manage their anxiety, stress, and depression during this unprecedented time in human history.
Objective: The goal of this proposed research project is a quantitative analysis of a day hospital program designed to treat persons with emotional dysregulation. Background: The Short-term Assessment and Treatment (STAT) program has been operating at Health Sciences Center, Winnipeg, Manitoba for many decades. The STAT program is based on the principles of dialectical and cognitive behavior therapy. The STAT program is a five week day hospital program employing multi-modal treatment methods to treat patients with emotional dysregulation. The literature provides evidence of numerous treatment models with varying effectiveness for this population of patients. The STAT program hasn't had a quantitative analysis of its treatment model. Problem Statement: Is the 5 week day hospital treatment model developed and employed by the STAT program effective in improving the mental health of participants admitted to the program?
14 participants residing in a forensic psychiatric hospital completed 15 Heart Rate Variance (HRV) biofeedback sessions. They completed 4 psychometric questionnaires, pre, during and post biofeedback training.
The VA Office of Patient Centered Care and Cultural Transformation's Whole Health initiative promotes the use of complementary and integrative health (CIH) approaches with traditional medical care to help Veterans achieve meaningful life goals and improved functioning. Equine-facilitated therapy (EFT), an animal-assisted form of CIH, is increasingly available to Veterans within the VA. Horses have extreme sensitivity to the emotional states, behaviors, and intentions of their herds and other animals, including humans, and mirror body language and respond to subtle nonverbal cues. As such, horses have the capacity to provide immediate feedback about a people's emotional and behavioral states. This capacity affords people opportunities to become more emotionally self-aware and, with guidance from EFT facilitators, learn how to regulate emotions and become calmer and more patient, attentive, and confident to gain the horses' cooperation. Participants in EFT are encouraged to apply what they have learned from their equine experiences to their relationships with people. Since high quality social functioning depends on effective regulation of one's emotions, EFT offers a novel way in which to improve the social functioning of Veterans with mental health concerns. VAs are increasingly embracing EFT as a CIH. However, carefully conducted, scientifically valid research about EFT has not been conducted. Existing peer-reviewed research about EFT for mental health is very limited, of poor methodological quality, and not focused on adults. None of it targets social functioning as a main outcome. This small randomized controlled pilot study proposes to examine an innovative EFT called The Equus Effect (TEE) as a complement to Veterans' existing VA mental health services to improve social functioning. TEE aims to improve Veterans' social functioning by developing their emotion regulation and interpersonal skills through therapeutic interactions with horses. This study will evaluate 1) the feasibility of study procedures, assessments, and outcomes, 2) the fidelity of experimental and control interventions, and 3) the acceptability of the interventions to Veterans and their mental health clinicians using mixed quantitative-qualitative methods. The study has the potential to lend initial credibility to the therapeutic claims of this increasingly popular CIH.
The present project aims to broaden our understanding of neural mechanisms which may underlie change in symptoms occurring over the course of Emotion Regulation Therapy. Specifically, we aim to examine neural changes as a result of either an 8-session or 16-session version of the treatment.
Peer support is historically prominent for substance use disorder (SUD), such as the world-wide model of Alcoholics Anonymous and other 12-step groups. Yet for trauma and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) there have been few attempts at peer help. A major challenge of trauma peer groups is that they usually focus on telling the story of members' trauma histories, which can be overly triggering and distressing. Seeking Safety offers an excellent choice for peer-led care. It is an evidence-based and is the most widely adopted model for SUD/PTD. It is present-focused, cognitive-behavioral, and provides psychoeducation and coping skills to help clients attain greater safety in their lives. It has been successfully implemented in peer-led format for many years and has been studied in various trials, including a recent randomized controlled trial (RCT) comparing peer versus professional delivery, with positive results. In Phase 1 we developed a beta version of a mobile app for peer-led Seeking Safety (PLSS). In Phase 2 we will enhance the app features and content and also conduct an RCT in a sample of adults with current SUD/PTSD to compare the Peer Safety app condition to a control app.
Objectives: The objectives of this research proposal are to study the delivery of an evidence-based mental health intervention in the alternate setting of youth employment programs tied to regional economic development and to examine the use of an Interagency Collaborative Team Approach (ICTA) as an implementation scale-up strategy that addresses the human resource shortage and related access to care and capacity challenges in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Specifically, this study aims to examine the incorporation of the evidence-based Youth Readiness Intervention (YRI) into a program that promotes employment among youth through a pilot study and scale-up intervention study in Sierra Leone. Study population: The study population includes youth participants, ages 18-26, with elevated t-scores on assessments of functional impairment and emotional dysregulation, who live in the Kailhun District of Sierra Leone. Pilot study design: A cluster randomized three-arm trial will be employed in the pilot phase in the same districts as the scale-up study. Youth participants (N=180, 18-26 years old, 50% female), stratified by gender, will be randomized into the three study arms. Once youth participants are enrolled into the study, they will be assigned to community level sites based on geographical location. Each of these community level sites will make up one cluster. The clusters will then be randomly assigned into the three study arms so that sixty youth participants will be randomized into the youth entrepreneurship training (EPP) arm, sixty youth participants will be randomized into the YRI+EPP arm, and sixty youth participants will be randomized into the control arm . The pilot study will last approximately 12 weeks and data will be collected at baseline and post-intervention. Further, investigators will survey 120 third-party reporters for a total pilot study sample size of 300 participants. Pilot study primary outcomes: The primary outcomes of the pilot study are to assess implementation science aspects related to a new partnership with the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit's (GIZ), who will fund and deliver the entrepreneurship training. This will include pretesting the measures battery, assessing the logistics of integrating the YRI into the entrepreneurship training, and testing use of the Interagency Collaborative Team Approach to training, supervision, and fidelity monitoring.
The end of treatment marks the beginning of a challenging period for breast cancer patients. While this period often provokes a sense of relief, it can also be a source of apprehension and vulnerability regarding the future. Patients may be brought to feel contradictory thoughts and emotions impacting their quality of life such as anxiety linked to uncertainty and fear of cancer recurrence. In order to accompany breast cancer patients during this transition period and to address these emotional difficulties, the Institut Jules Bordet has launched an 8-session psychological multi-component group intervention. Its objective is to bring patients tools and competencies (e.g., hypnosis, treatment of intrusive thoughts, learning to cope with uncertainty, attention reorientation toward positive thoughts) to promote emotion management and well-being.