Clinical Trials Logo

Self-control clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Self-control.

Filter by:

NCT ID: NCT06466837 Not yet recruiting - Diabetes Clinical Trials

Just-In-Time Adaptive Interventions for Diabetic Patients

Start date: September 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The addition of proactive nurse consultations was useful to older adults with diabetes mellitus in facilitating their chronic disease self-management. However, the service is time and resource-intensive. With the support of advanced technology, mhealth App seems to be a convenient way to support patients in managing diabetes.

NCT ID: NCT06330779 Not yet recruiting - Pain Clinical Trials

Trauma-adapted Yoga in Child & Adolescent Psychiatry.

TAY-CAP
Start date: January 1, 2025
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this randomized clinical trial is to evaluate the efficacy of trauma-adapted yoga as a complementary intervention to care as usual in child and adolescents psychiatry clinics, in the population of adolescents with the diagnosis of ADHD and/or PTSD. We hypothesize that trauma-adapted yoga (TAY) is an effective non-pharmacological intervention for adolescent with ADHD and/or PTSD. Aims: (1) Validate the impact of TAY on the mental health & quality of life of adolescents with ADHD and/or PTSD. (2) Investigate the feasibility of online TAY for continued self-care. (3) Explore adolescents' experiences & parental perspectives on TAY in their treatment. (4) Explore healthcare professionals' experience on the integration of TAY into clinical practice. Within and between group (yoga group vs waiting list) analyses will be performed.

NCT ID: NCT06235593 Recruiting - Chronic Disease Clinical Trials

Self-care in the Person With Chronic Disease

Start date: October 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Determine the nursing care needs of the elderly population sample according to the self-care deficits identified using the "Self-Care of Chronic Illness Inventory - Patient Version (version 4)" in elderly population living in their own homes or in the homes of relatives or friends in the district of Évora.

NCT ID: NCT06087185 Recruiting - Obesity Clinical Trials

Obesity and Mindful Eating in Patients With Anxiety

OMETA
Start date: March 23, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Background: Obesity is chronic disease with high prevalence rates, functional disability and difficult long-term management. Anxiety is one of the most common psychological disorders in obesity, and when associated with other factors such as emotional eating and emotional dysregulation, it impairs treatment and interferes with lifestyle changes. Finding an intervention that improves the eating behavior of these patients and facilitates adherence to obesity treatment, associated with less emotional distress, is of great clinical interest. Objective: The aim of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of the Mindful Eating (ME) intervention on neurocognitive and behavioral outcomes in patients with obesity and anxiety compared to the control group with exposure to videos promoting quality of life. Methods: A five-weeks randomized clinical trial will be performed with 52 patients in adulthood. The Mindful Eating intervention group will receive an online protocol with one meeting per week. This is a protocol that has been adapted for five weeks and consists of a group intervention with 10-15 participants. Mindfulness, Mindful Eating and Self-Compassion training will be based on the Eat for Life protocol. The control group will receive five videos of psychoeducation, one topic per week. After, all participants will receive lifestyle advices, a first-line "treatment-as-usual" to obesity. There will be a face-to-face assessment with anthropometric, behavioral and biological measurements pre and post-intervention. The outcomes may help in understanding the mechanisms underlying the change in eating behavior, in order to direct new therapeutic strategies for the treatment of anxiety and obesity comorbidities.

NCT ID: NCT05966831 Enrolling by invitation - Self-Control Clinical Trials

Metacognitive Self Control and Job Interview Training

Start date: August 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study is a randomized controlled trial (RCT) that assesses the effectiveness of a metacognitive self-control training intervention (MCT) in conjunction with virtual-reality job interview training (VR-JIT) in a sample of formerly incarcerated individuals. The study also includes an implementation evaluation.

NCT ID: NCT05903053 Enrolling by invitation - Infant Development Clinical Trials

Pilot Study: A Telehealth Intervention for Caregivers of Infants With Early Signs of ADHD

Start date: August 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This project will build on the investigators' work focused on early identification of ADHD, expanding to the development of a feasibility/pilot intervention involving early intervention for such infants. The investigators will evaluate the effectiveness of a telehealth-delivered, caregiver-implemented supportive intervention for infants/toddlers show early self-regulation difficulties.

NCT ID: NCT05795179 Recruiting - Self-Control Clinical Trials

Stress & Self-Control Costs

Start date: August 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Self-control failures are a universal challenge for healthy and clinical populations. Recent work suggests these failures may arise from excessive cognitive costs associated with exercising self-control, yet the mechanisms underlying these costs are unknown. To address this, the investigators will use a validated decision-making task that measures how much individuals will pay (from a study endowment) to restrict access to tempting rewards that may lead to self-control failures. The investigators will examine these costs to identify their cognitive, neural and affective mechanisms. First, the investigators will identify the cognitive and computational mechanism that gives rise to self-control costs. Second, the investigators will characterize the neural correlates of self-control costs and identify neural mediators and connectivity patterns stemming from these costs. Finally, the investigators will examine how different classes of stressors (physical, social, or lifetime stress) shape the behavioral and neural representations of self-control costs.

NCT ID: NCT05178290 Enrolling by invitation - Exercise Clinical Trials

Back to ECE Safely With SAGE: Reducing COVID-19 Transmission in Hispanic and Low-income Preschoolers

BESAGE
Start date: November 22, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to get children safely back to school by (1) Child and Family Testing, (2) ECE Personnel Testing, and (3) Outdoor Learning via Garden Education.

NCT ID: NCT05145712 Recruiting - Interventional Clinical Trials

Quantitative Bowel Readiness Assessment System in Predicting the Missed Detection Rate of Adenomas

Start date: July 21, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To verify the correlation between the proposed artificial intelligence based bowel preparation assessment system and the missed detection rate of adenomas, and to evaluate whether the system can effectively assist doctors in identifying patients who need to be re-examined by colonoscopy due to poor intestinal cleanliness.

NCT ID: NCT05031559 Completed - Impulsive Behavior Clinical Trials

Episodic Future Thinking and Compassion

Start date: March 29, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

During the COVID-19 (Coronavirus Disease 2019) pandemic, public health departments have issued guidelines to limit viral transmission. In this environment, people will feel urges to engage in activities that violate these guidelines, but research on guideline adherence has been reliant on surveys asking people to self-report their typical behaviour, which may fail to capture these urges as they unfold. Guideline adherence could be improved through behaviour change interventions, but considering the wide range of behaviours that COVID-19 guidelines prescribe, there are few methods that allow observing changes of aggregate guideline adherence in the 'wild'. In order to administer interventions and to obtain contemporaneous data on a wide range of behaviours, the researchers use ecological momentary assessment. In this preregistered parallel randomised trial, 95 participants aged 18-65 from the United Kingdom were assigned to three conditions using blinded block randomisation, and engage in episodic future thinking (n = 33), compassion exercises (n = 31), or a sham procedure (n = 31) and report regularly on the intensity of their occurrent urges (min. 1, max. 10) and their ability to control them. The researchers investigate whether state impulsivity and vaccine attitudes predict guideline adherence, while assessing through which mechanism these predictors affect behaviour.