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Stress Disorders, Traumatic clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04785157 Completed - Covid19 Clinical Trials

Neurotropism and Neuroinflammation in COVID-19 Patients With Delirium.

BRAINSTORM
Start date: June 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Emerging evidence indicates that SARS-CoV-2, the etiologic agent of COVID-19, can cause neurological, neuropsychological and psychiatric complications. Given the global dimensions of the current pandemic, there is to consider the possible large-scale neurocognitive impact of COVID-19. Therefore, there is an urgent need for longitudinal studies to determine the acute and chronic effects that COVID-19 may have on the Central Nervous System. These putative effects include the possibility that the CNS serves as a reservoir for the virus, and that COVID-19 triggers CNS deleterious inflammatory cascades and neurodegenerative process. The public implications of these effects are very important in the long term.

NCT ID: NCT04776304 Completed - PTSD Clinical Trials

Art Therapy qEEG Study for Service Members With a Traumatic Brain Injury and Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms

ArtTherapy
Start date: October 30, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Service members and/or recently separated veterans with post traumatic stress symptoms and mild traumatic brain injury may participate in 8 sessions including 2 sessions including interviews and questionnaires as well as 6 sessions of art therapy. In the art therapy, participants will be provided with a blank paper mache mask template and invited to alter the mask however they wish using a variety of art materials. The therapist will use the art-making process and culminating product to aid in self-reflection, reframe negative thoughts and feelings, and work through traumatic content. Prior to the session start participants will get set up with a mobile qEEG (worn like a hat and backpack). The qEEG will measure brain activity in a non-invasive way throughout the art therapy session to improve understanding of brain activity during the art therapy process.

NCT ID: NCT04775524 Enrolling by invitation - Stress Clinical Trials

AWARENESS Trial (AWARENESS) of Storytelling Through Music in Healthcare Workers

Start date: March 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This research study is examining the feasibility and effectiveness of an online version of the Storytelling Through Music (STM) program with oncology nurses who have worked during the COVID-19 pandemic.

NCT ID: NCT04771767 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

Combined Ketamine and eCBT Intervention for PTSD

Start date: August 1, 2021
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

An open label RCT assessing the efficacy of a combined treatment approach for PTSD, using Ketamine infusions and online Cognitive Behavioural Therapy.

NCT ID: NCT04770584 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder

Fear and Avoidance in PTSD Patients

Start date: July 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this research study is to study how the brain learn to avoid certain stimuli or situations using an experimental paradigm. The big goal is to measure brain responses and subject's feelings and expectations when they are learning to actively avoid experimental stimuli, and how fear extinction learning and monetary cost can change how and when subjects are to avoid.

NCT ID: NCT04769999 Completed - Clinical trials for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder

Computer Assisted Lessening of Intrusive Memories in the Emergency Department

CALM-ED
Start date: June 4, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

During the COVID-19 pandemic, clinical staff working in frontline NHS hospital and pre-hospital departments (e.g. emergency department, intensive care unit, ambulance service) are being faced with difficult and stressful situations, which may be traumatic to them. Staff report high rates of post-traumatic stress symptoms, such as intrusive memories of these incidents, which 'pop into their mind' unexpectedly, are distressing and can impact on work performance. Currently there is a lack of tailored evidence-based interventions for staff struggling with intrusive memories of work-related traumatic events: simple, accessible, remotely-delivered interventions are needed. An intervention which has been found to be effective in reducing intrusive memories is a simple cognitive task that involves briefly bringing to mind the memory and then playing the computer game Tetris with specific ("mental rotation") instructions. This case series study aims to test the intervention in a group of 8-20 staff members working clinically in NHS hospital and pre-hospital departments. The intervention will be delivered remotely (via computer/smartphone/tablet/phone). Participants will record the number of intrusive memories daily over a 3-week period, with the intervention delivered after 1 week (with optional subsequent booster sessions). Symptoms of trauma, anxiety and depression will be assessed weekly over this period, and at 4 weeks after the intervention. It is predicted that participants will have fewer intrusive memories per day/week, and lower clinical symptoms scores, after completing the intervention than before completing the intervention. The study will also investigate how feasible and acceptable the intervention is for NHS staff. Findings will inform the next steps in developing and evaluating a digital intervention to reduce intrusive memories of work-related traumatic events in healthcare staff.

NCT ID: NCT04763330 Recruiting - Anxiety Disorders Clinical Trials

Reducing Suicide Risk in Older Veterans Using Problem Solving Therapy

Start date: January 24, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Suicide is a national crisis, especially among older Veterans for whom evidence-based suicide prevention efforts are lacking. This proposal responds to the national priority to develop and improve interventions for suicide prevention, with a focus on at-risk older Veterans. The randomized control trial will compare VA usual care, which is suicide safety planning, with brief Problem Solving Therapy and suicide safety planning. This study uses Problem Solving Therapy because it has support from our pilot data and from secondary data analysis from other studies for reducing late life suicide risk. This treatment also has support for alleviating two key risk factors for late life suicide risk, functional disability and executive dysfunction, and thus this study will examine how older Veterans with varying levels of functional disability and executive functioning respond to treatment to inform future targeted implementation. In accordance with national priorities, existing infrastructure in Problem Solving Training could be expanded to support more rapid VA-wide implementation.

NCT ID: NCT04761510 Completed - Clinical trials for Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic

Mindfulness-SOS: Stress Reduction for Refugees

Start date: September 14, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The COVID-19 pandemic crisis is associated with a wide range of stressors for the general population. For forcibly displaced persons (FDPs), the turmoil of this crisis is magnified significantly, and elevated pre-existing post-migration stressors and trauma-related mental health problems are acutely amplified. In a recent randomized control trial, Mindfulness-Based Trauma Recovery for Refugees (MBTR-R) led to large acute stress-buffering effects among Eritrean asylum seekers in Israel. The investigators thus developed Mindfulness-SOS for Refugees - a brief internet-based mobile-supported adaptation of the MBTR-R mental health intervention program - specifically designed to mitigate acute stress and related mental health symptoms among FDPs. The investigators will conduct a nonrandomized single-group intervention trial of the efficacy, safety, utilization, and related feasibility of Mindfulness-SOS for Refugees among a traumatized chronically stressed sample of East African asylum seekers in an urban post-displacement setting in the Middle East (Israel). The study will be carried out during an acutely stressful period of time for this population due to a COVID-19 pandemic national lockdown.

NCT ID: NCT04752839 Not yet recruiting - Depression Clinical Trials

Evaluation of the Psychosocial Impact on Health Professionals Exposed During COVID 19 Coronavirus Pandemic

Start date: February 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Application of a survey in electronic support to hospital professionals. This survey will include different demographics as well as questions from own elaboration about the different aspects related to the development of work during the health emergency. A third part will be included different validated scales for screening / diagnosis of different problems that can present those who are working in the Current situation. The different scales are the PHQ-9, GAD 7, ISI, and EIE-R. These scales address the different problems that have been seen that can introduce professionals, Depression, Anxiety, Insomnia and adaptation to stressors.

NCT ID: NCT04752072 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Complex Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

RESTORE Trial: A Pilot RCT of Enhanced Skills Training in Affective and Interpersonal Regulation (ESTAIR) for Veterans With CPTSD

Start date: February 25, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Complex Post traumatic Stress Disorder (CPTSD) is now recognized as a separate trauma-based psychological condition to PTSD. CPTSD is a broader diagnosis that includes the core PTSD symptoms (re-experiencing in the here and now, avoidance, and sense of current threat) plus an additional set of symptoms that are collectively referred to as 'disturbances in self-organisation' (DSO). DSO symptoms capture pervasive psychological disturbances that are associated with traumatic exposures and that are distributed across three clusters: difficulties in affect regulation (AR), negative self-concept (NSC), and disturbances in relationships (DR). There are no effective interventions for CPTSD. It is therefore of paramount important to identify effective interventions to treat veterans with CPTSD. The present study will be one of the first to investigate the effectiveness of a novel, modular intervention for CPTSD. Enhanced Skills Training in Affective and Interpersonal Regulation (ESTAIR) is a person-centered intervention that involves targeting the symptoms of CPTSD clusters sequentially using concrete modules (i.e., specific number of sessions targeting specific clusters of symptoms). The overall aim of this study is to establish the feasibility, acceptability and preliminary effects of ESTAIR in treating CPTSD. To achieve these aims, the investigators will conduct a pilot randomised controlled trial (RCT), with a sample of 60 military veterans meeting the diagnostic criteria for CPTSD, and with two treatment arms: ESTAIR vs. a treatment-as-usual (TAU) condition.