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Personality Disorders clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Personality Disorders.

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NCT ID: NCT03760627 Completed - Clinical trials for Mental Health Wellness 1

Evaluation of A Mindfulness Resiliency Training Program for Refugees Living in Jordan

Start date: November 30, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To estimate the efficacy of a structured, scalable and replicable psychosocial intervention targeting refugees living in Jordan, Amman who have been forced to flee their homes due to regional conflicts.

NCT ID: NCT03753737 Completed - Clinical trials for Substance Use Disorders

Personality Disorders and Substance Use Disorders in a Sexual Context in the Man Having Sex With Other Men Population

PSYCHEMS
Start date: November 22, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Chemsex refers to the use of psychoactive drugs in a sexual context, mainly cathinones, GHB/GBL, methamphetamine, cocaine and ketamine. This can cause infectious or psychiatric complications, addictions, and often goes with high risk sexual behaviours. Recent studies have highlighted the relationship between personality disorders, substance use disorders and risky sexual behaviours. It is important to understand the factors associated with chemsex in order to offer adapted prevention and care plans. The study hypothesis is that personality disorders, evaluated with the PDQ-4+ questionnaire, are more frequent among man having sex with other men with a substance use disorder linked to chemsex than among man having sex with other men who have never practised chemsex.

NCT ID: NCT03717818 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Borderline Personality Disorder

Mechanisms of Change in Brief Treatment for Borderline Personality Disorder

BPDCHANGE
Start date: October 19, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The present two-arm randomized controlled study aims at testing the effects (i.e., symptom reduction) and the underlying mechanisms of change associated with a brief psychiatric treatment (10 sessions over 4 months), compared with treatment as usual. Participants undergo assessments at four points (intake, 2 months, discharge and 12 month follow-up). In addition to symptom measures, all individuals undergo a two-step assessment for the potential mechanisms of change (i.e., emotion and socio-cognitive processing): a) behavioural and b) neurofunctional. We hypothesize that change in the mechanisms explains the treatment effects. The present study uses an innovative treatment of BPD and at the same time a sophisticated assessment procedure to demonstrate the critical role of psychobiological change in emotion and sociocognitive processing in brief treatments. It will help increase the effectiveness of initial treatment phase for BPD and help diminish the societal burden of disease related with BPD. This study is funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF).

NCT ID: NCT03681145 Completed - Depression Clinical Trials

Youth to Text or Telehealth for Engagement in HIV Care

Y2TEC
Start date: August 15, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Youth To Text or Telehealth for Engagement in HIV Care (Y2TEC) is a randomized control pilot to assess the feasibility and acceptability of delivering a targeted problem-solving intervention to youth ages 18-29 living with HIV (YLWH) for improving HIV care engagement, mental health, and decreasing substance use. The intervention will be delivered to participants in two condition groups in remote telehealth sessions delivered via video-conference over 4 months. Participation in the study will last about 8 months. The investigators hypothesize that the Y2TEC intervention will be feasible and acceptable for YLWH, and will result in improved HIV clinical outcomes. If feasible and acceptable, it can be scaled up for a multi-site randomized clinical trial and ultimately offered in the clinical care of YLWH.

NCT ID: NCT03677037 Completed - Clinical trials for Borderline Personality Disorder

The Short-Term MBT Project

MBT-RCT
Start date: September 24, 2018
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The study will evaluate the benefitial and harmful effects of short-term (20 weeks) compared to long-term (14 months) mentalization-based therapy for outpatients with subthreshold or diagnosed borderline personality disorder.

NCT ID: NCT03665415 Completed - Physical Activity Clinical Trials

Expanded Game Squad for Neurodiverse Youth

NDGameSquad
Start date: November 6, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The proposed study will pilot the use of an adapted Game Squad intervention aimed at improving physical activity and other important health behaviors (nutrition, sleep hygiene, screen time habits) for children and adolescents receiving special education supports for behavioral health challenges, or who are served by the Boston Medical Center Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics (BMC-DBP) clinic.

NCT ID: NCT03636139 Completed - Clinical trials for Borderline Personality Disorder

Cognitive Control of Negative Stimuli in BPD

Start date: January 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is characterized by impairments in the cognitive control of negative information. These impairments in cognitive control are presumably due to blunted activity of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) along with enhanced activations of the limbic system. However, the impact of an excitatory stimulation of the dlPFC still needs to be elucidated. In the present study, we therefore assigned 50 patients with BPD and 50 healthy controls to receive either anodal or sham stimulation of the right dlPFC in a double-blind, randomized, between-subjects design.

NCT ID: NCT03630471 Completed - Clinical trials for Mental Health Issue (E.G., Depression, Psychosis, Personality Disorder, Substance Abuse)

Effectiveness of a Problem-solving Intervention for Common Adolescent Mental Health Problems in India

PRIDE
Start date: August 20, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

We will conduct a two-arm individually randomized controlled trial in six Government-run secondary schools in New Delhi. The targeted sample is 240 adolescents in grades 9-12 with persistent, elevated mental health difficulties and associated impact. Participants will receive either a brief problem-solving intervention delivered by lay counsellors (intervention), or enhanced usual care comprised of problem-solving booklets (control). Self-reported adolescent mental health difficulties and idiographic problems will be assessed at 6 weeks (co-primary outcomes) and again at 12 weeks post-randomization. In addition, adolescent-reported impact of mental health difficulties, perceived stress, mental wellbeing and clinical remission, as well as parent-reported adolescent mental health difficulties and impact scores, will be assessed at 6 and 12 weeks post-randomization. Parallel process evaluation, including estimations of the costs of delivering the interventions, will be conducted.

NCT ID: NCT03627663 Completed - Clinical trials for Borderline Personality Disorder

DBT-SS for Cognitively Challenged Individuals With Deliberate Self-harm

Start date: December 10, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study evaluates the effect of Dialectic Behavior Therapy Skills System (DBT-SS) in individuals with Intelligence Quotient 65-85 and recurrent self-harm. The study is primarily descriptive with 6 cases followed by repeated measurements (weekly; time series analysis). Primary outcome measure is frequency and severity of self-harming behavior, reported weekly 4 weeks before the start of the intervention, throughout the intervention and 12 weeks after the intervention has stopped.

NCT ID: NCT03608449 Not yet recruiting - Anxiety Disorder Clinical Trials

Doing More With Less": Optimizing Psychotherapeutic Services in the Mental Health System

Start date: September 1, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Psychotherapy is one of the cornerstones of mental health services. It is provided by psychiatrist, psychologists and psychiatric social worker in both hospital and out-patient services, and is assumed to require massive manpower and training inputs. Internationally, the clinical outcomes of routine mental health services are rarely recorded or reported. However, a rough estimation is that half (40-60%) of all psychotherapies have a favorable clinical outcome. Recently (Clark et al, 2017), the English Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) Program, which delivers psychotherapies to more than 537 000 patients in the UK each year, indicated that 44% of the patients recovered, and 62%- improved. Consistent with a causal model, most organizational factors also predicted between-year changes in outcome, together accounting for 33% of variance in reliable improvement and 22% for reliable recovery. The proposed study aims at dramatically improving the yield of psychotherapies in the Mental Health Services by combining monitoring and patient-therapist matching strategies. The first will be achieved by implementing Routine Outcome Monitoring (ROM), and the second- by applying a patient-therapist match-re-match procedure during psychotherapy