View clinical trials related to Personality Disorders.
Filter by:The goal of this clinical trial is to compare etc. in patients with borderline personality disorder pure individual schema therapy to combined individual-group schema therapy. The main questions it aims to answer are: - is there a difference in effectiveness? - is there a difference in (early) treatment dropout? Participants will receive either - individual schema therapy or - combined individual-group schema therapy. Researchers will compare individual to combined individual-group schema therapy see if there is a difference in effects and/or a difference in dropout from treatment.
This study will examine the impact of Skills Training in Affective and Interpersonal Regulation (STAIR) group, using self-report measures, on Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), emotional dysregulation, borderline personality disorder symptoms, global psychopathology, and access to quality mental health care. Aims include assessing the feasibility of STAIR, reducing patients' trauma and emotion dysregulation symptoms, examining whether STAIR may be used as an alternative to DBT for patients on the DBT, and improving patient satisfaction and clinic efficiency
Introduction: Borderline personality disorder is a serious mental illness with high prevalence and difficult to diagnose. BPD is characterized by unstable relationships, distorted sense of self, emotional instability and a strong impulsiveness with weak impulse control. Physiotherapy in mental health, currently being developed, is considered potentially effective in order to improve physical and mental health and the quality of life related to health. Objective: The main objective of this study is to analyze the effect of an aerobic therapeutic exercise plan in the quality of life of patients with BDP. Methodological design: A random controlled critical trial is going to be carried out. A sample of 50 participants diagnosed with BPD, aged 18 years and older, will be taken. They will be divided randomly in two groups: control group and treatment group. The treatment group will carry out a program of aerobic exercise twice a week for five weeks divided in four defined levels of variable length. The variables that will be compared before and after the intervention are: seriousness according to symptomatology, depression and anxiety level, emotion regulation difficulty, life quality level, physical condition level and ability of effort. After the intervention, the results will be analyzed by means of statistical processing based on the data obtained.
When in crisis, people with borderline personality disorder (BPD) frequently seek care in emergency departments (EDs) often presenting with suicide and self-harm behaviour. There is no established evidence-based brief intervention for patients with BPD in ED settings, however a 4-session psychotherapeutic intervention for people with personality disorders in ED settings was tested in Australia and showed promising results in reduced health care utilization. The proposed pilot randomized controlled trial will assess the feasibility of delivering this 4-session intervention in the ED for people with BPD who present with suicidal ideation or self-harm with the aim of reducing health care utilization.
This study assesses brain connectivity and function of individuals ages 13-25 at a prodromal or early stage of a psychotic disorder. Participation involves approximately 3 hours of MRI scanning and up to 6 hours of behavioral testing at Washington University School of Medicine's campus.
This study is going to evaluate the effects of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) on Borderline Personality Disorder patients symptoms.
This study aims to investigate psychosocial risk- and protective factors such as psychiatric disorder, socio-economic background and family functioning among school dropouts and to compare the findings with those by a matched control group of regularly enrolled students.