FAAH Availability in Psychiatric Disorders: A PET Study
Post Traumatic Stress DisorderAlcohol Use Disorder1 moreThe aim of the present study is to examine Fatty Acid Amide Hydrolase (FAAH) availability in humans, including healthy individuals and across a spectrum of psychiatric disorders in which alterations in the endocannabinoid system are observed.
Online Cognitive Rehabilitation of Executive Dysfunction in Nonamnestic MCI
Nonamnestic Mild Cognitive ImpairmentCognitive Dysfunction5 moreNonamnestic mild cognitive impairment (naMCI) is a prodromal state characterized by deficits in executive functioning, a collection of higher-order abilities involved in organization, planning, inhibition, and complex reasoning. Research shows that individuals with naMCI have an increased risk of developing non-Alzheimer's dementia such as frontotemporal dementia and dementia with Lewy bodies, which pose substantial personal and societal costs. Accordingly, interventions that can successfully slow down or reverse the course of naMCI are needed. Goal Management Training (GMT) is a cognitive rehabilitation platform that has been studied extensively, applied clinically, and manualized into kits for clinicians (Levine et al., 2000; Levine et al., 2007; Levine et al., 2011; Stamenova & Levine, 2019). The purpose of GMT is to train individuals to periodically "STOP" what they are doing, attend to task goals, evaluate their performance, and monitor or check outcomes as they proceed. Recently, an online version of GMT has been developed and validated in order to circumvent barriers to attending in-person sessions. The purpose of the current study is to determine if the online version of GMT is effective at improving self-reported executive dysfunction in individuals diagnosed with naMCI against a control group that is receiving treatment-as-usual from their care provider. It is hypothesized that, compared to the control group, individuals receiving GMT will report a decrease in executive function deficits.
Development of Mental Health Outcomes Following the 2020 Petrinja Earthquake
Mental Health DisorderPost Traumatic Stress Disorder3 moreOn 29 December 2020, an earthquake struck Petrinja in Croatia. The aim of this study is to assesses prevalence of symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder, depression, anxiety, and panic disorder among exposed inhabitants and examine the effect of family therapy on mental health as part of a public health emergency response and rapid assessment.
PSYCHIATRIC Disorders and Covid-19
Psychiatric DisorderCovid19Given the possible risks and complications of a comorbidity between psychiatric disorder and coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), it seems particularly important to specify the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic in patients with psychiatric disorders and suspected of infection, hospitalized in a specific unit, at the psychiatric, somatic and pharmacological level.
Exercise in Severe Mental Illness. The PsychiActive Project 2.0
Exercise TherapySevere Mental IllnessThe purpose of this randomized controlled trial is to study the feasibility, adherence and effects of two exercise interventions on body weight, body composition, anthropometric and fasting blood measures, physical fitness, quality of life, and lifestyle habits in patients with severe mental illness.
Assessing the Effect of Compensatory Cognitive Intervention Among People With Severe Mental Illness...
Mood DisordersSchizophrenia1 moreThe aim of this study is to assess the efficacy of a short term compensatory cognitive group intervention - the Compensatory Cognitive Training (CCT) among people with severe mental illnesses, receiving ambulatory treatment
Targeting Adolescent Depressive Symptoms Via Brief, Web-Based Interventions
DepressionDepressive Disorder3 moreMajor depression (MD) in youth is a serious psychiatric illness with extensive morbidity and mortality. The American Academy of Pediatrics recently released practice guidelines promoting primary care (PC)-based youth MD screening; however, even when diagnosed by PC providers, <50% of youth with MD access treatment. Thus, a need exists for interventions that are feasible for youths and parents to access and complete-and that may strengthen parents' likelihood of pursuing longer-term services. Single-session interventions (SSIs) may help forward these goals. SSIs include elements of comprehensive treatments, but their brevity makes them easier to disseminate at scale. Meta-analytic evidence suggests SSIs can reduce youth psychopathology, including self-administered (e.g., online) SSIs. One computer-based SSI, teaching growth mindset (GM; viewing personal traits as malleable), has reduced adolescent depressive symptoms in multiple RCTs. A second computer-based SSI was recently developed to reduce youth depressive symptoms via targeting reductions in self-hate-a symptom identified as important for the maintenance of other depressive symptoms in teenagers. This study will test whether either the growth mindset SSI (GM-SSI), the self-kindness SSI (SK-SSI), or both SSIs reduce symptoms of depression in adolescents, relative to an active "supportive therapy" SSI, which teaches adolescents to share their emotions with trusted others. Youths participating in existing research through the Healthy Brain Network (N=501) will receive either the growth mindset SSI (GM-SSI), the self-kindness SSI (SK-SSI), or the supportive therapy SSI (ST-SSI). The investigators will examine whether the GM-SSI and/or the SK-SSI, versus the ST-SSI will reduce youth depressive symptoms across three months. Results may identify two novel, potent, and brief interventions for adolescent depressive symptoms.
Strengthening Social, Emotional and Behavioral Resilience
Neurodevelopmental DisordersEmotional Disorder1 moreBehavioral and emotional disorders adversely affect overall health and well-being. Prevalence rates among children and adolescents classified with behavioral and emotional disorders or neurodevelopmental disorders (NDD), as recently redefined in ICD-11, have steadily increased over the past decade. In particular, prevalence rates among persons classified with Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD), the fastest rising behavioral and emotional disorder, have sharply risen over the past five years and is now estimated at 1 in 54. Shared symptoms within behavioral and emotional disorders include persistent social, emotional and behavioral functioning deficits that often impact self-management, social-awareness and metacognition competences, in addition to adulthood health and wellness life course transition management. Social and Emotional Learning (SEL) stakeholder advocates have contributed meaningfully to the strengthening of behavioral and emotional health through interventions that focus primarily on physical and mental health outcomes of diagnosed individuals. However, focus on spiritual health outcomes and the at-risk population remain largely underutilized. Research that seeks to employ an integrative physical-mental-spiritual approach to strengthen social, emotional and behavioral resilience, of at-risk school age populations where social stigma and prohibitive treatment costs remain barriers to treatment is needed to help expand the field's understanding of the reciprocal relationship between spiritual health and emotional and behavioral outcomes. The RENEW (Resilience in Emotional and Behavioral Wellbeing) intervention will employ a multidisciplinary approach of social and emotional learning competency training, gamification principles and faith-centered values to strengthen social, behavioral and emotional resilience and competencies of those at risk for behavioral and emotional disorders, via a child-as co-researcher approach.
Evaluation of a Multidisciplinary Lifestyle Treatment for Inpatients With Mental Illness
Mental IllnessLifestylePeople with mental illness (MI) have a reduced life expectancy compared to the general population, mostly attributable to somatic diseases caused by poor physical health. Modifiable "lifestyle factors" have been increasingly associated with the onset of somatic diseases in people with MI and refer to health behaviours such as physical activity (PA), diet, sleep and smoking behaviour. Despite the evidence demonstrating the efficacy of interventions aimed at improving lifestyle factors, there have not been many structural changes in routine clinical care for people with MI. Using a multidisciplinary, multicomponent approach, Deenik and colleagues (2019) were the first to find long-term positive effects in both mental and somatic health in a real-world inpatient setting for people with severe mental illness (SMI). They found improvements in metabolic health, psychosocial functioning and quality of life, and a reduction in the use of psychotropic medication. The authors urged to confirm and complement findings in scaled-up studies, and made several suggestions for improvement of the treatment and pragmatic research of implementation. In line with these previous recommendations the MULTI is being scaled-up into the MULTI+. This study investigates the implementation and effectiveness of a multidisciplinary lifestyle treatment for inpatients with mental illness (MULTI+).
A Study of Efficacy and Safety of Idebenone vs. Placebo in Prodromal Parkinson Disease
REM Sleep Behavior DisorderParkinson DiseaseTo investigate whether 24 months of idebenone may reduce the progression from Prodromal Parkinson disease (PPD) to Parkinson disease (PD).