Treating Smokers With Mental Illness
Smoking CessationCigarette Smoking6 moreThis is a smoking cessation study that will enroll smokers who have been diagnosed with a severe mental illness. The study will use a combination of intensive tobacco treatment counseling and nicotine replacement therapy to assist smokers in cutting back on and quitting smoking over the course of six months.
Relationship Between Treatment With Bach´s Flower Remedy and Spiritual Well-Being of People With...
Mental DisordersPersonal Well BeingThe Common Mental Disorders (CMD) refer to health states involving non-psychotic psychiatric symptoms. Part of this broad diagnostic category, symptoms such as difficulty concentrating, forgetfulness, insomnia, fatigue, irritability, feelings of worthlessness, somatic complaints, etc. The CMD has a big social impact, and its prevalence in the general population is 25% and graduate students in health care reaches 40%. The Bach´s Flower Remedies are considered a complementary therapy approved and recommended by World Health Organization and by the Brazilian Ministry of Health and in his theory it has great spiritual nature. In addition, international scientific research have suggested that the strengthening of spiritual well-being can help significantly and positively promoting mental health. This project aims to assess the relationship between treatment with Bach´s Flower Remedies and Spiritual well-being of people with Common Mental Disorders in undergraduate health students of a university located in São José dos Campos, state of São Paulo, Brazil. This research presents a quantitative and qualitative methodology, experimental clinical trial, triple blind. The treatment will take place with two groups of forty people, the group of treatment and the placebo´s. The trial will happen in six sessions at intervals of 30 days, totaling eight months of treatment. Statistical analysis will be used chi-square or Fisher exact test to study the association between the scale of spiritual well-being and the use of Bach Flowers for each time point (3 times). To compare the evolution of the results (scales) during the study will set a model for ordinal data with repeated measurements over time. For these statistical tests is assumed a significance level of 5% (p < 0.005).
Recovery From Psychosis in Schizophrenia - The Impact of Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy
SchizophreniaSchizoaffective Disorder1 moreThis study examines the impact of Cognitive-Behavior Therapy (CBT) on symptoms, physiological arousal, stressors, and the ways to deal with them in individuals with schizophrenia and related disorders. The primary aim of this study is to investigate the role cognitive coping strategies play in mediating the link between stress, physiological arousal, and psychotic symptoms in individuals with schizophrenia during recovery from psychosis.
Dual Diagnosis (Psychosis and Cannabismisuse): Comparison of Specialized Treatment Versus Unspecified...
Psychotic DisordersMarijuana Abuse1 moreIntention of the study is to examine, if the symptomatology of dual diagnosis patients is less severe after a special indication training for reduction of cannabis consumption in comparison to unspecified trainings. Point of interest is psychopathology and consumerism.
Ziprasidone in the Psychosis Prodrome
Psychosis ProdromeThis study aims to determine whether ziprasidone is superior to placebo over 24 weeks for patients with the psychosis prodrome.
Safety Study of ORG 34517 for Major Depression With Psychotic Features
Major Depressive DisorderPsychotic DisordersPatients suffering from Major Depressive Disorder with Psychotic features who have received no changes in their medications in the previous two weeks will receive "usual" treatment of antidepressants, antipsychotics and/or mood stabilizers and adjunct therapy using ORG34517. The patient will be hospitalized for up to two weeks to monitor their medications and progress and will return to the site for periodic assessments.
D-Serine Treatment of Negative Symptoms and Cognitive Deficits in Schizophrenia
SchizophreniaSchizoaffective DisorderThis study is based on the hypothesis that by increasing N-methyl-D-aspartic acid (NMDA) receptor function in the brain and thereby increasing the capacity of the brain to both form new connections and strengthen existing connections, schizophrenic patients may derive both greater and sustained benefit from cognitive retraining.
Families With Substance Use and Psychosis: A Pilot Study
PsychosisSubstance Use13 moreThe purpose of this study is to develop and evaluate an intervention that adapts Community Reinforcement and Family Training (CRAFT) for families experiencing first episode psychosis and substance use delivered via telemedicine (video conferencing). The intervention aims to improve treatment engagement and reduce distress, and it will be delivered via telemedicine (CRAFT-FT). To assess feasibility of the intervention, family members will complete the sessions and provide feedback to refine the treatment manual. Data on client relatives with psychosis will be collected for preliminary assessment purposes. Client relatives will not complete the research study intervention.
Evaluating a Novel Mobile App for Social Cognition in Psychosis
Schizophrenia; PsychosisTo develop, and then evaluate a mobile phone app to deliver therapy homework activities between group sessions (social cognition intervention) in individuals with psychosis. The investigators are interested in whether offering homework via an app is a) feasible, and b) acceptable. The investigators will also assess whether there is an initial indication that offering homework via the app improves outcomes following the group therapy.
Mobile CBT for Negative Symptoms
SchizophreniaSchizoaffective DisorderThis randomized controlled clinical trial will test a combined group contact plus mobile CBT-informed skills training intervention targeting defeatist attitudes in consumers with schizophrenia in comparison to a supportive contact control group in order to change motivational negative symptoms linked to defeatist attitudes.