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Active clinical trials for "Depressive Disorder"

Results 3841-3850 of 5015

Dignity Therapy for Patients With Early Dementia and Their Family

DementiaMild1 more

Developed by Harvey M. Chochinov in 2005, Dignity Therapy (DT) invites individuals with life-limiting illnesses to reflect on matters of importance to them and compiles them in a narrative document for the patient to share. DT has shown to improve quality of life and a sense of dignity, as well as supporting relatives in the process of grievance. Featuring a gradual loss of memories of the past, decline of cognitive functions and awareness of self, dementia can be regarded as a life-limiting or life-changing illness, which is often accompanied by significant psychological stress. DT may help patients and their relatives reduce this stress. Yet, no studies have been conducted to determine the benefits of DT in patients with early stage dementia (ESD). This study investigates the feasibility and acceptance of DT by patients with (very) mild dementia (CDR: 0.5 - 1.5) and their relatives, as well as their overall satisfaction. This study further seeks to determine the effects of DT on sense of dignity, quality of life, dyadic coping, and levels of anxiety and depression in a randomized controlled design.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Youth to Text or Telehealth for Engagement in HIV Care

HIV/AIDSMental Health Issue (E.G.6 more

Youth To Text or Telehealth for Engagement in HIV Care (Y2TEC) is a randomized control pilot to assess the feasibility and acceptability of delivering a targeted problem-solving intervention to youth ages 18-29 living with HIV (YLWH) for improving HIV care engagement, mental health, and decreasing substance use. The intervention will be delivered to participants in two condition groups in remote telehealth sessions delivered via video-conference over 4 months. Participation in the study will last about 8 months. The investigators hypothesize that the Y2TEC intervention will be feasible and acceptable for YLWH, and will result in improved HIV clinical outcomes. If feasible and acceptable, it can be scaled up for a multi-site randomized clinical trial and ultimately offered in the clinical care of YLWH.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Research on the Effects of Combined Neurostimulation Protocols on Stress

Stress ReactionStress Related Disorder1 more

The study examines the effects of the combined use of two different non-invasive brain stimulation (NIBS) techniques targeting the DLPFC on stress reactivity and recovery.

Completed16 enrollment criteria

Bioavailability Study of Amitriptyline Hydrochloride Tablets

Depressive Disorder

Main Objectives: In Chinese healthy subjects under both fasting and postprandial conditions, amitriptyline hydrochloride tablets (size: 25 mg) produced by Sandoz Inc., US Orange Book, were used as reference preparations. A single-dose oral reference preparation and amitriptyline hydrochloride tablets (size: 25 mg) produced by Hunan Dongting Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd., and the calculation of the drug by the time course of amitriptyline and its active metabolite, nortriptyline, in vivo The kinetic parameters were compared, and the relative bioavailability of the two was compared to evaluate bioequivalence, which provided the basis for the bioequivalence study of amitriptyline hydrochloride tablets by Hunan Dongting Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. Secondary Objective: To monitor the safety of fasting and postprandial oral test and reference preparations.

Completed31 enrollment criteria

Studies of Mothers With Postnatal Depression

Postnatal Depression

This study investigates the effects of a single dose of oxytocin (OT) delivered via a nasal spray in women with and without traits of postnatal depression (PND).

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Antidepressant Decision Aid for Major Depressive Disorder Patients

DepressionDepressive Symptoms3 more

The purpose of this study is to determine whether Antidepressant Decision Aid for Major Depressive Disorder is feasible and effective in involving patients in the decision-making process when initiating pharmacotherapy.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

BRITEPath- Phase 2

DepressionSuicidal Ideation

BRITEPath (BP) aims to support co-located mental health clinicians in the development of a high quality, effective, and personalized safety plan for referred patients who screen positive for depression and/or suicidal ideation. BRITEPath utilizes BRITE, a safety planning and emotion regulation app that is loaded on the patient's smart phone and has previously been shown to be well accepted and to reduce suicide attempts compared to usual care in psychiatric inpatients (HR = 0.49). To support mental health clinicians in the development of effective safety plans, study investigators will develop Guide2Brite (G2B), which provides step-by-step instructions for the mental health clinician on how to populate BRITE onto the patient's smartphone and BRITEBoard, a clinician dashboard that tracks patient symptoms, app use, and rating on helpfulness of different interventions assessed through BRITE.

Completed15 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of the Safety and Pharmacokinetics of MSI-195 to a Commercial S-Adenosylmethionine

Major Depressive Disorder

This study was a pharmacokinetic and safety evaluation of the S-adenosylmethionine formulation MSI-195, and a commercial comparator. The study was broken into two stages. The first stage was an exploratory single ascending dose design of MSI-195 in 8 healthy normal male volunteers. The second stage was a single dose evaluation, targeting 26 male and female volunteers at set doses of MSI-195 and commercial comparator in a cross-over design followed by a food effect study on MSI-195. Plasma samples were collected and assayed for S-adenosylmethionine. Pharmacokinetic parameters were calculated using that data.

Completed37 enrollment criteria

PanDirect: Self-care Tools and Telephone Coaching for Depression and Anxiety During Pandemics

Mental Health Wellness 1Coaching4 more

During pandemics older adults with chronic physical conditions are a particularly vulnerable population for unmet mental health needs. This is a consequence of a number of factors which include decreased access to their doctors because of restrictions in visits in order to decrease risk of disease transmission and because doctors are seconded to provide medical services in areas of high priority. Since Public Health authorities worry that pandemics may be a reality of the future, this study is being operationalized during the present COVID-19 pandemic in order to see what can be learned about different ways to provide mental health care under such constraints. The study offers evidence-based approaches to managing feelings of anxiety or depression that may have existed prior to the onset of a pandemic, or that have arisen during a pandemic. It uses principles of cognitive behavioural therapy in which participants are offered self-care tools to help them develop strategies for dealing with their various symptoms. These tools have already been shown by the team to be effective in other contexts in studies DIRECT-sc (Effectiveness of a supported self-care intervention for depression compared to an unsupported intervention in older adults with chronic physical illnesses) and CanDIRECT (Effectiveness of a telephone-supported depression self-care intervention for cancer survivors). The present study, PanDIRECT (Assisting Family Physicians with Gaps in Mental Health Care Generated by the COVID-19 Pandemic), aims to answer the following questions: Can these tools be used in the community care of mental health problems during pandemics? Are they acceptable to patients? Using a randomized control trial, does lay-coaching of use of these tools improve their use and patient outcomes? Do family practitioners value patient information sent to them at the end of the trial

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Stress and the Sympathetic Nervous System in Adults With Depression

Major Depressive Disorder

To test our hypotheses, we will enroll healthy adults having no history of mood disorders and adults with major depressive disorder (MDD) having a broad range of depressive symptom severity. After screening, subjects will meet with the research coordinator or an investigator for a discussion, with opportunity for questions, before applicable consent forms are obtained. Daily stress processes will be assessed using an ecological momentary assessment approach for 8 consecutive days. On the last day of the daily stress assessment, we will directly measure muscle sympathetic nerve activity, blood pressure, and heart rate during acute laboratory-based cognitive, emotional, and physiological interventions to induce a stress response. A venous blood sample will be taken for measurements of metabolic and renal health and systemic inflammation. Aim 1: To examine the effect of daily psychosocial stressor exposure on acute sympathetic stress reactivity in MDD. Two stressor exposure indicators will be calculated: stressor frequency (i.e., percentage of interview days during which at least one stressor occurred) and total stress (i.e., total number of stressors reported across all interview days) and will be related to the magnitude of responsiveness to the acute stress interventions. We hypothesize that the slope of this relation will be steeper in adults with MDD compared to healthy non-depressed adults. Aim 2: To determine the relation between negative affective reactivity to daily psychosocial stressor exposure and acute sympathetic stress reactivity in MDD. Negative affective reactivity will be calculated as the change in affect on days when stressors occurred compared to one's typical affect on non-stressor days and will be related to the magnitude of responsiveness to the acute stress interventions. We hypothesize that the slope of this relation will be steeper in adults with MDD compared to healthy non-depressed adults.

Completed17 enrollment criteria
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