View clinical trials related to Generalized Anxiety Disorder.
Filter by:Anxiety disorders have the highest prevalence among mental disorders and cause considerable individual and financial costs. Current treatments do not relieve mental suffering of many patients. Understanding neurobiological mechanisms involved in pathological anxiety is a major scientific challenge.
The purpose of this research study is to assess the acceptability and feasibility of the implementation strategy and fidelity of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) for older adults with Generalized Anxiety Disorder.
Background: Over the last several years, there has been an increase in the popularity and availability of mobile digital technologies. Many recent studies have evaluated a range of mobile digital mental health interventions (DMHIs). Smartphone applications, remote monitoring, tracking devices, and wearable computers such as smartwatches and virtual reality headsets are being widely used for these studies. Besides that, psychometric scales are being used to help psychiatrists to improve treatment outcomes. The systematic administration of symptom rating scales and other assessment tools to help treatment decisions has been called measurement-based care (MBC) and it has shown good results in improving outcomes and time to response/remission of psychiatric diseases. As there is little data regarding MBC in Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD), the investigators decided to put technology and MBC together to study an easy and accessible way to improve the GAD usual treatment. Objectives: The aim of this study is to evaluate the benefit of digital interventions as an add-on tool to "treatment-as-usual" (TAU) in GAD patients. Methods: A twelve-weeks randomized clinical trial will be performed with 60 GAD patients. The control group will receive TAU, defined as 30-minutes online consultation with a trained psychiatrist, consisting in symptoms evaluation, general orientations about the disorder and use of medication. The consultations are going to occur biweekly. The digital intervention group (active group) will receive TAU, associated with two digital tools. The first one consists of psychoeducational videos to be seen between the sessions and the second one includes self-application of GAD-7 scale the day before the next scheduled consultation. All these digital interventions are going to be accessed in a mobile application, called "+PSI", that is already available in Apple Store and Google Play. The participants are going to be instructed to download the application on their mobile phones for free. The videos are going to be created especially for this project and will use animations and educational content, being of short duration (average 3 minutes). GAD-7 scale, and Hamilton Anxiety Scale (HAM-A) are going to be applied at baseline and at the end of the follow up by a blind rater. The investigators are also going to test the application tools usability using the System Usability Scale (SUS). Intermediate and follow-up evaluations will be performed to assess the speed and maintenance of improvement, respectively.
The purpose of the study is to assess efficacy and safety of a digital cognitive behavioural therapy for patients with pulmonary fibrosis on anxiety. The study is decentralized and participation is not limited to patients living close to the sites.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of 1 Hz parietal stimulation in anxiety. Our approach will be to administer 1 week of open-label accelerated 1 Hz parietal rTMS (5 days, 8 sessions/day, 600 pulses/session) and measure the effect of this neuromodulation on APS, and short term memory in a cohort of anxiety GAD patients.
This study compares the effectiveness of two levels of therapist support for an internet-based, parent-led cognitive behavioral therapy for youth with anxiety and ASD.
The primary aim of the pilot study is to investigate the feasibility of conducting a randomized controlled trial (RCT) comparing the effects of transdiagnostic and diagnosis-specific cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) for patients with anxiety disorders in routine psychiatric outpatient care in Stockholm, Sweden. It is hypothesized that an RCT is feasible in terms of recruitment, retention, therapist competence and adherence to treatments, and that the treatments are well received by participants.
The proposed experimental study will be the first to investigate whether exercise vs. sitting enhances consolidation of extinction learning in adults with high AS and anxiety disorders, and the mechanistic pathways of expectancy, affect, and key stress response markers.
Anxiety disorders are prominent mental health burdens, affecting roughly 1 in 5 adults annually, and a third of individuals over the course of their life. These disorders are also impairing to individuals, with 23% of individuals with anxiety disorders describing their impairment as serious. Given the public health impact, it is crucial that interventions are designed to alleviate symptoms of anxiety, through reducing risk factors that predispose individuals to develop anxiety. One approach to do this is to develop brief interventions that could be administered virtually, which can then be supplemented using ecological momentary intervention (EMI) to reduce risk factors for anxiety disorders. In contrast to targeting more distant risk factors, targeting more direct risk factors, such as intolerance of uncertainty, could be used in the prevention and treatment of anxiety disorders.
"Braining" is a clinical method for physical exercise as adjunctive therapy in psychiatric care. The core components are personnel-led group training sessions and motivating contact with psychiatric staff, as well as measurement and evaluation before and after the training period of 12 weeks. Objective. This study aims to describe the clinical and demographic variables in the population of patients who participated in Braining 2017-2020, investigate the feasibility of Braining, and analyse perceived short-term effects and side effects of Braining regarding psychiatric and somatic symptoms. Method. The project is a retrospective, descriptive study. Patients at Psykiatri Sydväst (PSV, Psychiatric Clinic Psychiatry Southwest, Stockholm) who participated in Braining 2017-2020 during at least 3 training sessions, will be asked for inclusion. Medical and demographic data, as well as patient treatment evaluations, are already available in medical records. Additionally, an extended 2-year long-term follow-up will be carried out. This includes blood and hair sample, physical examination as well as qualitative interviews with a representative subgroup.