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Self-Injurious Behavior clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Self-Injurious Behavior.

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NCT ID: NCT03709472 Completed - Depression Clinical Trials

Computer Assisted Family Intervention to Treat Self-Harm Disparities in Latinas and Sexual/Gender Minority Youth

Start date: November 12, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study is designed to refine and test the efficacy of a computer assisted culturally informed and flexible/adaptive intervention for Latino adolescents for whom self-harm behaviors are a health disparity-specifically, Latinas and sexual/gender minority youth.

NCT ID: NCT03682406 Completed - Clinical trials for Suicide and Self-harm

CAMS-G Group Therapy for Suicidal Veterans

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

The primary aim of this pilot study is to determine the feasibility and acceptability of CAMS-G. Our aim is to determine if CAMS-G is an effective treatment and whether it has the potential to be tested in a large-scale setting.

NCT ID: NCT03655470 Completed - Suicidal Ideation Clinical Trials

Safety Planning in Juvenile Justice for Suicidal Youth

Safety
Start date: January 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will examine the feasibility and acceptability of a program designed to conduct safety planning with youth in the juvenile justice system who are at risk for a suicide attempt and/or self-injury and to increase the possibility of them receiving outpatient mental health treatment. After training staff in the intervention, the investigators will pilot test the safety planning intervention and gather information on how well it worked on reducing self-harm, getting families to follow up with referrals for mental health care, and how often they attend treatment.

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: NCT03548402 Completed - Anxiety Clinical Trials

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Nonsuicidal Self-injury

Start date: March 19, 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) for individuals who engage in nonsuicidal self-injury(NSSI) and have comorbid anxiety. With the data collected from the study, the investigators will test the following hypotheses: Acceptance and commitment therapy will lead to reductions in anxiety and self-harm behaviors in non-suicidal self-injury individuals.

NCT ID: NCT03375099 Completed - Clinical trials for Intentional Self-Harm by Other Specified Means

Comparison of Lethal Means Counseling and an Active Control Condition, With and Without Provision of Gun Locks

Start date: June 1, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In 2013, the National Guard reported a suicide rate that was substantially higher than both the general population and the active duty component of the United States military. The prototypical National Guard suicide decedent appears to be a young male firearm owner not currently deployed who dies using his own gun. Prior research within the military has revealed that soldiers are unlikely to seek out or engage in mental health services. In sum, current best practices in suicide risk assessment are poorly equipped to identify the individuals most likely to die by suicide. This study aims to examine the acceptability, feasibility, and utility of a single lethal means counseling session as part of a suicide prevention approach targeting demographic groups overrepresented in National Guard firearm suicides. 232 firearm-owning National Guard personnel will be randomized to one of four conditions, each of which requires a single 15-25 minute session: (1) lethal means counseling (2) lethal means counseling plus the provision of free gun locks (3) health and stress control condition (4) health and stress control condition plus the provision of free gun locks. The investigators anticipate that those who receive lethal means counseling will subsequently store their personal firearms more safely and report being more willing to store their firearms away from the home during any hypothetical future suicidal crisis. The overarching goal of each hypothesis is to examine the extent to which gun owning young male National Guard personnel at varying levels of suicide risk are willing to engage in means safety.

NCT ID: NCT03353961 Completed - Clinical trials for Nonsuicidal Self-injury

Internet Delivered ERITA for Nonsuicidal Self-Injury

ERITA
Start date: November 20, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To evaluate if Internet delivered emotion regulation individual therapy for adolescents is an efficacious treatment when delivered as adjunctive to treatment as usual compared to a control group consisting of treatment as usual.

NCT ID: NCT03315208 Completed - Depression Clinical Trials

Study of a Transdiagnostic, Emotion-focused Group Intervention for Young Adults With Substance Use Disorders

ARMS UP
Start date: November 22, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The overall aim of this pilot study is to conduct a preliminary trial to evaluate the acceptability and feasibility of adding a transdiagnostic, emotion-focused group intervention (the Unified Protocol, UP) to treatment as usual (TAU) in a comprehensive outpatient program for adolescents and young adults with substance use disorders and emotional distress. Only patients seeking services or engaged in care at an existing outpatient program at MGH (the Addiction Recovery Management Service) are eligible for participation.

NCT ID: NCT03143283 Completed - Clinical trials for Suicidal and Self-injurious Behavior

An ED-based RCT of Lethal Means Counseling for Parents of At-Risk Youth

Start date: August 1, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The National Action Alliance to Prevent Suicide recently released a research agenda aimed at significantly reducing suicide over the next decade. Aspirational Goal 12, "Reduce access to lethal means that people use to attempt suicide," calls for identifying effective strategies to reduce a suicidal person's access to firearms and other lethal means. A promising strategy is to counsel patients seen in the emergency department (ED) for a psychiatric emergency to reduce access to firearms (the most lethal suicide method) and medications (the most common method of suicide attempt). To date, however, few studies have evaluated changes in firearm storage practices among those who received lethal means counseling (LMC), and those that have, including a pilot conducted in Colorado by the study team, have lacked control groups. Results from the pilot, which provided emergency department based LMC counseling to parents of suicidal adolescents, found that among gun-owning parents, 33% had unlocked guns at home on the day of the ED visit and none did on follow up. Using the piloted LMC protocol, we will conduct the first randomized, controlled trial (RCT) of the effectiveness of ED-based LMC on firearm and medication storage. The proposed RCT, to be conducted in five Colorado hospitals, will test whether parents of at-risk adolescents who are treated in hospitals that have (vs. have not yet) implemented our LMC protocol are more likely to store household firearms and medications safely. In addition, we will conduct in-depth, qualitative interviews with parents who have received LMC counseling to better understand those factors that affect parents' willingness and ability to make changes to firearm and medication storage. We will also conduct qualitative interviews with clinicians to understand factors affecting clinician engagement in LMC. AIM 1: To assess the effectiveness of an ED-based LMC intervention to improve how parents of pediatric patients (age 10-17) who visit the ED for a mental health emergency store household firearms and medication. AIM 2: To examine how attitudinal and contextual factors shape a) parents' decisions about firearm and medication storage following LMC, and b) clinicians' delivery of LMC messages.

NCT ID: NCT03092271 Completed - Suicide Clinical Trials

Randomized Trial of Stepped Care for Suicide Prevention in Teens and Young Adults

Step2Health
Start date: April 3, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This randomized controlled trial will evaluate two approaches to achieving the aspirational goal of Zero Suicide within a health system: 1) Zero Suicide Best Practices initiated through a zero suicide quality improvement initiative within a health system; and 2) Zero Suicide Best Practices plus an innovative stepped care for suicide prevention intervention for adolescents and young adults that matches treatment intensity with risk levels for suicide/self-harm. ..