Clinical Trials Logo

Mental Health Wellness clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Mental Health Wellness.

Filter by:

NCT ID: NCT04309279 Completed - Clinical trials for Mental Health Wellness

Zentangle on Psychological Well-being

Start date: April 11, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will examine the effects of Zentangle as an intervention for reducing stress and enhancing psychological wellbeing among Hong Kong adults. Zentangle is a mindful doodling process in which participants draw repetitive, structured patterns on small pieces of paper. The patterns consist of combinations of dots, lines, and curves. Zentangle is developed in 2003 by two Americans, and this concept is still new to many people. Some studies suggested that Zentangle can be effective in reducing stress and anxiety, but the number of research papers on Zentangle is limited. Although Zentangle has become a rather popular stress relief activity in Hong Kong recently due to its easiness to learn and minimal tool requirement, there is no related study on its effectiveness in promoting psychological wellbeing in Hong Kong.

NCT ID: NCT04257773 Completed - Clinical trials for Mental Health Wellness

International REACH Forgiveness Intervention

Start date: February 11, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Six sites spanning five regions (Hong Kong, Colombia, Indonesia, Ukraine, South Africa) will administer a forgiveness workbook intervention in a randomized design with a stepped, waitlist intervention deployment.

NCT ID: NCT03578159 Completed - Malnutrition Clinical Trials

Study of Arsha Vidya Chhatralaya Initiative on Health and Functioning of Disadvantaged Tribal Children

Start date: March 3, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

India's poor tribal communities have far worse health and social indicators than the general population. Most tribal people live in remote forested or desert areas where illiteracy, trying physical environments, malnutrition, inadequate access to potable water, and lack of personal hygiene and sanitation make them more vulnerable to disease.The aim of Chhatralaya initiatives taken by Arsha Vidya, Jaipur was to address the exclusion of the socially and economically disadvantaged children of the tribes and to provide a fair opportunity to all.