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Mental Disorders clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Mental Disorders.

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NCT ID: NCT06282146 Not yet recruiting - Depression Clinical Trials

Testing a Transdiagnostic TMS Treatment Target

T5
Start date: April 1, 2024
Phase: Early Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this clinical trial is to test a new brain stimulation treatment target for individuals with depression plus at least one additional psychiatric disorder. The main question is to understand the safety profile of a non-invasive form of brain stimulation called accelerated intermittent theta burst stimulation when it is targeting the posterior parietal cortex. Additional questions focus on whether this stimulation improves symptoms of depression and other psychiatric disorders as well as whether this stimulation changes brain function.

NCT ID: NCT06279962 Completed - Mental Illness Clinical Trials

Survey Experiment to Estimate Level of Mental Illness Stigma Based on Condition and Gender

Start date: June 15, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to measure levels of mental illness stigma based on condition and gender of the participants and individual portrayed with mental illness.

NCT ID: NCT06278532 Recruiting - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

Validation of the Lithuanian Version of the BNSS, CDSS, and the SCoRS

Start date: December 11, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study aims to validate the Lithuanian version of the Brief Negative Symptoms Scale, Calgary Depression Scale for Schizophrenia, and Schizophrenia Cognition Rating Scale in a Lithuanian sample. This will be done by comparing results obtained from the Brief Negative Symptoms Scale, Calgary Depression Scale for Schizophrenia, and Schizophrenia Cognition Rating Scale with results obtained from the Positive and Negative Symptoms Scale, the Montgomery Asberg Depression Rating Scale, and the Montreal Cognitive Assessment test.

NCT ID: NCT06271954 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Major Depressive Disorder

The Relationship Between Emotion Regulation and Psychiatric Disorder in Youth

Start date: March 27, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

According to the increasing worldwide prevalence rate of psychiatric disorders in youth, the mental health of youth is becoming more and more important. Taiwan's Ministry of Health and Welfare reported the clibing suicide rate of youth in past five years and showed the prevention work and related intervention for youth's mental health was noteable. The definition of emotion regulation was "consists of the extrinsic and intrinsic processes responsible for monitoring, evaluating, and modifying emotional reactions, especially their intensive and temporal features, to accomplish one's goals." Emotion regulation strategies including "rumination", "avoidance", "suppression", "Problem-solving", "reappraisal", "acceptance", "social support", and "distraction". Previous studies had examined the relationship between emotion regulation and mental health in youth; maladaptive emotion regulation would increase the individual's depressive and anxiety symptoms. Carstensen proposed social emotion theory in 1995 Selectivity theory (SST) refers to the need for emotion regulation, which activates Social participation in late adulthood. SST assumes that young people are more interested in social interaction behaviors related to information seeking and building self-concept. characteristics of youth affected by many normative challenges such as adolescence, school transitions, and more complex social Landscape; Adaptive emotion regulation will reduce risk of clinical emotion attacks of illness, especially depression and anxiety.To explore the relationship between emotion regulation and mental health from a psychosocial developmental aspect, we focused on the interaction between individual and environment. Compared with the previous generation, most youths of this generation were participating in social activities and building up interpersonal relationships through the internet, suggesting the internet was an important social context.

NCT ID: NCT06270290 Recruiting - Concussion, Brain Clinical Trials

The COSP-RBD Study: Concussions and Contact Sports in RBD vs Controls

COSP-RBD
Start date: April 23, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The goal of this observational study is to investigate concussions and contact sports practices in REM sleep behaviour disorder (RBD). The main questions it aims to answer are: - What is the proportion of patients with RBD that have a history of concussions or exposure to contact sports? - Is this proportion higher to that in control patients without a diagnosis of RBD? Participants will undergo an interview with a sleep medicine specialist to answer questions about history of concussions and contact sports practices. Researchers will compare an RBD group and a control group (without RBD) to see if the proportion of concussions and exposure to contact sports differ.

NCT ID: NCT06263933 Recruiting - Psychotic Episode Clinical Trials

Effect of Experience Sharing and Mutual Assistance on Insight and Recovery During the First Psychotic Episode

DIPEM
Start date: November 13, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Controlled, prospective, qualitative and quantitative trial. The goal of this trial is to evaluate the mutual assistance early intervention device efficacy and its impact on insight and personal recovery of participants living with a first psychotic episode. This intervention lasts 5 days with 1 session per day of 1 hour 30 minutes. Three evaluations, before the intervention, after intervention and 1 month after the hospitalization's end.

NCT ID: NCT06258460 Recruiting - Mental Illness Clinical Trials

Multimodal Psychotherapy Training for Chinese Medical Students

Start date: February 1, 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Providing evidence-based, well-designed psychotherapy teaching to train them to get a basic understanding of psychotherapy and to gain required skills for clinical practice would be fundamental to medical students, residency. This study will be a two-arm randomized controlled trial (RCT) to evaluate the effectiveness of multimodal psychotherapy training program for medical students in China.

NCT ID: NCT06252909 Not yet recruiting - Depression Clinical Trials

Treating Common Mental Disorders in Women in Mozambique by Addressing Intimate Partner Violence in Couples

Start date: September 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Adapting mental health treatments to address modifiable interpersonal problems has the potential to improve and sustain outcomes in low-resource settings where treatment gaps persist. This K23 Award will prepare the candidate to become an independent investigator with high-impact public health research and expertise in couple-based interventions that address interrelated mental health problems and intimate partner violence in couples by gaining expertise in engagement and treatment of men, adapting an evidence-based treatment for common mental disorders to address IPV in couples, designing and conducting randomized controlled trials with couples, and professional skills development. This work has applicability for low-resource low-income countries and US populations that experience couple-based violence and the mental health treatment gap. With its focus on intimate partners, the intervention also has the potential to benefit health and wellbeing of children.

NCT ID: NCT06241300 Recruiting - Executive Function Clinical Trials

Executive Function and Parenting in Childhood

EPIC
Start date: November 20, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Deficits in executive functioning (EF) disproportionately impact children living in poverty and increase risk for psychopathology, particularly disruptive behavior disorders. This randomized clinical trial seeks to determine whether childhood EF, assessed across neural and behavioral units of analysis, is an experimental therapeutic target that can be directly modified through caregiver participation in the Chicago Parent Program (CPP), if increases in EF predict reduced disruptive behavior trajectories in low-income children over a short-term follow-up period, and identify which CPP-driven parenting skill improvements are the most influential in modifying EF. This work will contribute new knowledge as to whether a cost-efficient parenting intervention, developed for and with low-income families raising young children in poverty, can modify EF, a neural behavioral mechanism implicated in risk for childhood disruptive behavior problems.

NCT ID: NCT06239246 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Cardiovascular Diseases

Association Between Cardiovascular Diseases and Mental Illness

Start date: October 1, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) are important public health concerns around the world and closely associated with the development and progression of mental illness, which in turn increases the risk of developing cardiovascular diseases. This study aimed (1) to explore the known or unknown protective and risk factors underlying this comorbidity using questionnaires; (2) to study the biomarkers (body fluid, imaging) of the participants, and to find the influence on the relationship between CVD and mental health; (3) to identify high-risk populations for mental disorders in CVD patients and to establish prediction models. (4) to establish a specialized medical database.