View clinical trials related to Stigmatization.
Filter by:This study is a randomized controlled trial (RCT) among 100 HIV-positive people with injection drug use, which aims to test the feasibility of the SCRIPT intervention and evaluate its effectiveness on the reduction of internalized stigma, as well as entry into substance use treatment or initiation of antiretroviral therapy.
This is a randomized controlled trial to test the effects on WBI of a novel psychological intervention combined with standard behavioral weight loss (BWL) treatment, as compared to BWL alone. Participants will be a total of 72 men and women seeking weight loss, ages 18-65 years, with a body mass index (BMI) of 30 kg/m2 or above, a history of experiencing weight bias, and elevated levels of WBI. Participants will attend a screening visit in which they will complete a behavioral evaluation with a psychologist and a medical history that will be reviewed by a nurse practitioner or physician. Questionnaires assessing experiences and internalization of weight bias, with confirmation by interviewer assessment during the behavioral evaluation, will be used to determine whether participants meet criteria for having high levels of WBI. Eligible consenting participants will be randomly assigned to the standard BWL intervention (n = 36) or the BWL + BIAS program (n = 36). All participants will attend weekly, 90-minute group meetings for 12 weeks (12 visits). In the BWL + stigma intervention, 60 minutes will be devoted to BWL and 30 minutes to weight stigma. In the standard BWL treatment group, the additional 30 minutes will be devoted to sharing recipes and food preparation tips. Following 12 weeks of weight loss treatment, participants will attend group meetings focused on weight loss maintenance, every-other-week from weeks 13-16 (2 visits), and monthly from weeks 17-26 (2 visits). Maintenance sessions in the BWL + stigma group will continue to incorporate discussion of WBI. Assessments - which include questionnaires and measurements of body weight - will occur at baseline and weeks 12 and 26. Weight will be measured at every group meeting for clinical purposes.
This is a randomized controlled trial examining the impact of videos on medical students' implicit and explicit attitudes and knowledge related to mental illness in Nepal. Medical students are randomized to one of three conditions: (a) no video, (b) a didactic video based on the mental health Gap Action Programme (mhGAP) modules for depression and psychosis; and (c) videos with personal testimonials from mental health service users with depression and psychosis.
Congenital melanocytic nevi (CMN) are a quite common congenital disorder. Over years, surgical excision was proposed to the patients because transformation into a malignant skin tumor (melanoma) was feared. Recent data proof that the risk for malignancy was overestimated. Nowadays still a lot of patients express their wish for surgical removal out of aesthetic reasons and psychological impacts. Many patients and families experience stigmatization because of the nevus. To proof a medical indication for surgical removal the investigators want to evaluate the quality of life and stigmatization before and after nevus surgery.
This Randomized Controlled Trial has been designed to test the efficacy of a behavioral intervention to reduce HIV-related stigma among nursing students and ward attendants in 16 sites in South India and 8 sites in North India.