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Psychological Distress clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03565562 Recruiting - Anxiety Disorders Clinical Trials

Preventing Psychological Distress and Suicidal Behaviours: a Web-based and Mobile Suicide Prevention Intervention in the General Population

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

An interventional research study will be undertaken to assess the effectiveness of the promotion at the local level of an e-health tool for suicide and psychological distress prevention (the StopBlues application and website). This trial is a cluster-randomized, parallel group, controlled intervention study with local authorities as the unit of randomization. Local authorities will be randomly assigned to one of the following three arms: local authorities not promoting the e-health tool (control group); local authorities promoting the e-health tool without general practitioners (GPs) involvement; local authorities promoting the e-health tool including GPs' waiting room. The trial will last 24 months and after a 12-month post-randomization period, local authorities from the control group will be allowed for a further 12-month period to launch their promotional campaign supported by the research team through regular contacts and additional technical and financial resources (intensively sustained promotion). This will facilitate the recruitment of clusters as well as their adherence to the intervention during the first 12-month period. The main criterion will be the number of suicidal acts at nine months. Data will be collected both at the local authority level and at the individual e-health tool user level.

NCT ID: NCT03434717 Recruiting - Breast Neoplasms Clinical Trials

Optimized Rehabilitation Following Primary Breast Cancer Surgery

RE-SCREEN
Start date: November 15, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to evaluate the effects of an intervention based on systematic screening of psychological distress as the basis for individualised support and rehabilitation following primary breast cancer surgery focusing on psychological , physical and health-economics outcomes. The aim is also to illuminate patients' and relatives' experiences and need of support during the rehabilitation .

NCT ID: NCT03137420 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Psychological Distress

Psychological Distress in Relatives of Severely Injured Patients

Start date: April 1, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Patients who have sustained and survived a polytrauma do heavily depend on the support and functioning of their family. This is only possible if the family members are physically and mentally able to cope with the situation. It is the investigators' hypothesis that the true percentage of polytrauma patients' relatives suffering under relevant psychological distress is higher than commonly assumed. The investigators conduct a prospective cohort study where we follow up on a cohort of patients and their relatives over 1 year after trauma - one group with severely injured patients (case) and one group with minor musculo-skeletal injuries (control). In order to assess the influence of the patients' disability and their own psychological distress on the psychological distress of the relatives, the investigators also collect corresponding data from the patients themselves. In order to assess the influence of the trauma itself, the investigators compare a group of multiple injured patients and their relatives with a group of patients with isolated musculoskeletal injuries and their relatives. In addition, the investigators record the ISS of each patient. In order to investigate the changes in relatives' distress over time and to find out more about potential risk factors or con-founders it is necessary to conduct a prospective study.