View clinical trials related to Mental Health Issue.
Filter by:In this multi-center randomized clinical trial, head and neck cancer (HNC) survivors with clinically significant body image distress (BID) (N=180) will be randomized to BRIGHT (a brief video tele-cognitive behavioral therapy intervention) or Attention Control (AC, a manualized tele-supportive care intervention that controls for professional attention, dose, delivery method, and common factors). HNC survivors will complete IMAGE-HN (a validated patient-reported outcome measure [PROM] of HNC-related body image distress [BID]; primary endpoint), measures of psychological and social well-being and quality of life (QOL), and measures of theory-derived mechanisms of change underlying BRIGHT (mediators).
Tai Chi is a kind of traditional martial arts in China, which has a remarkable function in healthcare. It has been used in many diseases as a complementary theory. The Chinese government attaches much importance to university students' physical and psychological health. However, there is an indisputable fact that the health condition of university students is declining, according to the report of the education ministry of China 2021. Tai Chi is a solid supplement to physical education and how to improve the physical health of university students through Tai Chi is the key to university physical education. This experimental research examines the effectiveness and the differences of two types of Chen Taichi training methods on the physical and psychological health of college students in China. Finally, to evaluate if the Chen Taichi with developed guidelines can improve the college students' physical and psychological health.
The overall objectives of this proposal are to support positive coping strategies that bolster mental health and lead to improved HIV outcomes among Young People Living with HIV (YPLWH). The central hypothesis is that SYV (Sauti ya Vijana, The Voice of Youth) will be effective to improve antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence and virologic suppression in YPLWH in Tanzania. The rationale for this project is that by targeting mental health, which is strongly associated with medication adherence, that this will effectively improve adherence and thereby HIV viral suppression. The central hypothesis will be tested in three aims in a hybrid type-1 effectiveness-implementation trial.
The current study is a feasibility pilot of the Lausanne Trialogue Play paradigm Intervention - Brief (LTP-Brief), a family systems therapy implemented in a community mental health setting. We will study the ultrabrief, virtual therapy to assess the feasibility of a future pilot RCT. Feasibility metrics include resource, scientific, and management considerations, as well as an examination of pre-post change in future child and family outcomes of interest.
Previous research documented that real-time feedback on attention as well as related forms of mental training (e.g. mindfulness meditation) may be used to train and impact external attentional control. These approaches to mental training are designed to train meta-awareness in order to enable attentional control. It is not yet known, however, whether such training targeting meta-awareness can be similarly used to impact internal attentional control. Thus, the investigators will test whether real-time feedback training and a brief mindfulness meditation training, relative to placebo control, will lead to greater internal attentional control among adults with elevated negative repetitive thinking.
The overarching goal of this project is to evaluate if evidence-based interventions can reduce PDG, burden, and stress in informal caregivers of individuals with dementia
The main goal of this current study is to develop and optimize methods for increasing access to, uptake of, and engagement in MAT (Medication Assisted Treatment) among communities of color.
The purpose of this project is to develop and test the acceptance and clinical efficacy of a cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)-based lifestyle intervention, to help manage obesity and diabetes-related health outcomes, provided through community health workers (CHWs) in Latino adults with type 2 diabetes (T2D). A collaboration with an established community-based organization named Sansum Diabetes Research Institute (SDRI), will provide an opportunity to develop, train and implement a culturally sensitive curricula for the CHWs that focuses on body weight and mental health (depressive symptoms and stress) among participants disproportionately impacted by T2D due to social, economic and community factors. Cultural sensitivity focuses on delivering health information based on norms, values, beliefs, environmental factors, and historical context that is unique to a racial/ethnic population. Therefore, for our curricula to be culturally sensitive it will include the following aspects: being primarily delivered in the Spanish language with English as needed, actively incorporate culturally relevant eating and physical activity recommendations, and encompass the foundational importance of familial and social relationships as part of the mental health component of the intervention. For this proposal, the specific aims of this project are: 1) develop a CBT-based lifestyle intervention that focuses on diet, activity, depressive symptoms, stress, and quality of life in collaboration with CHWs and participants from SDRI, and provide training for three CHWs to implement this intervention; 2) conduct a 26-week randomized controlled trial in 50 Latino adults with T2D in the SDRI organization to evaluate the efficacy of the CBT-based lifestyle intervention to improve weight- and diabetes- related health outcomes (body weight, glycemic control, blood pressure, lipid profile, depressive symptoms, stress, and quality of life); 3) evaluate the acceptance and delivery of the CBT-based lifestyle intervention in CHWs and participants with T2D. If successful, this study will establish the structure and content of a culturally sensitive, effective CBT-lifestyle, community-based treatment.
This is a cross-sectional research. The investigators plan to recruit about 250 front-line nurses who provided direct care to COVID-19 confirmed cases in a medical center in Taiwan. Online querstionnaires are used to collect the data. The relationship between variables such as stressors related to COVID-19, coping status, resilience, and compassion fatigue of participants will be analysis to provide the direction of nurses' mental health-related interventions.
The proposed study will test a mHealth peer navigation intervention for trans women living with HIV in a trans public health clinics to increase initiation and engagement in mental health and substance use services. The peer will navigate and provide support in-person and via mobile phone with HIPAA-compliant text messaging. Ecological momentary assessments will be conducted to enhance self-monitoring of mental health stress and coping-related substance use.