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Sickness Behavior clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Sickness Behavior.

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NCT ID: NCT05154019 Completed - Clinical trials for Mental Health Wellness 1

Managing Minds at Work: A Feasibility Pilot Trial

Start date: October 20, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This feasibility pilot cluster RCT aims to pilot and feasibility test an online training toolkit (Managing Minds at Work) for line managers to develop their knowledge and confidence in preventing work-related stress and promoting mental health at work. The setting is work organisations of different types and sectors across the Midlands region of the United Kingdom. Participants must have direct managerial or supervisor responsibilities for 3 or more staff members. The intervention consists of five modules of online learning: Looking after your own Mental Health; Designing and managing work to promote mental well-being; Management competencies to prevent work-related stress; Developing a psychologically safe work environment; Having conversations about mental health at work. Each module includes some descriptive content, interactive elements and opportunities for reflections, and take between 20-30 minutes to complete. Participating organisations will be allocated to either the intervention or control arm. A waiting list control will be used, with line managers in the control organisations starting the intervention 3-months after baseline. Data will be collected through online surveys with the intervention group at baseline, immediately post-intervention (around 6 weeks post baseline), 3-months follow-up and 6-months follow-up. Control group will complete the online surveys at baseline and 3-months (as they start the intervention) and immediately after completing the intervention. As a feasibility pilot study, analysis will be focused on acceptability of the intervention, feasibility of recruitment, retention and data collection, and estimating parameters for a larger trial. The primary outcome measure is line managers' confidence to create a mentally healthy workplace. The secondary outcomes line manger mental health knowledge, line manager workplace mental health literacy, line manager self-rating of behaviour. In addition, the direct reports of line managers will be invited to participate to assess the feasibility of collecting the outcome data related to: employee well-being, employee rating of line manager behaviour, employee sickness absence, employee productivity. A process evaluation will be conducted to assess intervention acceptability, usability, implementation and effectiveness. Qualitative data will be collected via module feedback forms and in-depth interviews with a sample of line managers from the intervention arm and stakeholders.

NCT ID: NCT04483999 Completed - Sickness Behavior Clinical Trials

Turkish Validity and Reliability Study of Virtual Reality Sickness Questionnaire

Start date: June 30, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study is planned for the cultural adaptation and validity of the "Virtual Reality Sickness Questionnaire".

NCT ID: NCT03551184 Completed - Sickness Behavior Clinical Trials

Inflammation and Brain Function - Main Study

Start date: October 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In this randomized double blind study, 52 healthy participants were injected with either 0.6 ng/kg body weight or placebo to test if changes in pain sensitivity is associated with change in neural activity using BOLD MR scanning.

NCT ID: NCT03551080 Completed - Sickness Behavior Clinical Trials

Inflammation and Brain Function - Pilot Study

Start date: October 2009
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In this randomized double blind cross-over study 8 healthy persons were injected with 0.8 ng/kg body weight lipopolysaccharide (LPS) /endotoxin and placebo at two different occasions. The aim was to investigate how pain sensitivity and health perception change in response to an acute immune activation.

NCT ID: NCT02529592 Completed - Sickness Behavior Clinical Trials

Endotoxin-induced Inflammatory and Behavioral Responses and Predictors of Individual Differences

Start date: February 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The objective of the present study is to specifically assess the effect of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) administration on the development of behavioral symptoms and the underlying contribution of inflammatory processes. In particular, the investigators will assess the development of subjective and objective behavioral symptoms. In addition, the investigators will determine whether some psychological trait or state can predict and/or modulate the LPS-induced inflammatory and behavioral responses. Twenty-five healthy subjects will be included. A placebo-controlled, double-blinded and cross-over design will be used. Subjects will receive an intravenous injection of endotoxin at 2 nanogram/kilogram (ng/kg) of body weight and an intravenous injection of sodium chloride as placebo of endotoxin injection at two different occasions. Prior to inclusion and randomization, subjects will come at the hospital and will receive a medical examination. Psychological variables that could affect the behavioral (or immune) response to LPS will be assessed at that time, using several self-assessment questionnaires. On the trial days, injection of endotoxin or sodium chloride will be performed and blood samples will be taken just before the endotoxin or sodium chloride injection and 1, 1.5, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7.5 hours after the injection. Blood samples will be used to measure several inflammatory and immune markers. Urine samples will be taken before the endotoxin or sodium chloride injection and as late as possible after the injection. Subjects will wear T-shirt all day. Urine and T-shirt samples will be used for behavioral assessment and analysis of body odor compound. Self-assessment questionnaires assessing behavioral and psychological variables will be completed by participants just before the endotoxin or sodium chloride injection, three hours and 7.5 hours after the injection. A short questionnaire assessing sickness behavior (SicknessQ) will be repeatedly completed by participants from just before to 7.5 hours after the endotoxin or sodium chloride injection. Several behavioral tests will be used, including a motivation task, a test assessing behavioral response to negative and sickness stimuli. Analysis of gait and motion, as well as of social interactions, will be performed. Photographs will be taken for the further rating of the faces.