Search Clinical Trials
Before medications are approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) or before certain therapy methods are widely accepted as effective, they are tested on people who volunteer to participate in a clinical trial.
Organizations across the country are looking for people like you to take part in their research studies. The list of studies below have been selected from ClinicalTrials.gov based on their inclusion of one or more of the following terms: anxiety disorders, depression, OCD, PTSD, and bipolar disorder.
The Anxiety and Depression Association of America (ADAA) is supportive of research that is conducted through clinical trials. Participating in research can potentially help change the mental health outcomes for you and others who suffer anxiety, depression, and related disorders. You may learn about new interventions/treatments that are being considered.
Read this ADAA blog about things to know and questions to ask before committing to a clinical trial.
This website page is brought to you in partnership with ResearchMatch.
Sponsor Condition of Interest |
---|
Type I Hybrid Effectiveness-Implementation Trial of Primary Care Brief Mindfulness Training for Vet1
VA Office of Research and Development
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Depression
Anxiety
The VA wants to understand what type of integrative and whole health approaches are
helpful for Veterans. The study is comparing two primary care based mental health
treatments, a mindfulness class that teaches mindfulness meditation and a problem-solving
class that teaches problem-solving skills a1 expand
The VA wants to understand what type of integrative and whole health approaches are helpful for Veterans. The study is comparing two primary care based mental health treatments, a mindfulness class that teaches mindfulness meditation and a problem-solving class that teaches problem-solving skills and how to build resilience, for Veterans who are experiencing symptoms of anxiety, depression, and/or PTSD. The goal of the study is to understand if the classes reduce symptoms of anxiety, depression, and/or PTSD and increase overall functioning. Type: Interventional Start Date: Aug 2024 |
Center M: Digital Health Innovation Pilot
Oregon Health and Science University
Perinatal Depression
Center M is a digital health solution to Perinatal Depression (PD) which provides an
alternative to Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy - Perinatal Depression (MBCT-PD).
Center M shifts treatment to a telehealth model, reduces the number of sessions, and
transitions home practice materials to a dig1 expand
Center M is a digital health solution to Perinatal Depression (PD) which provides an alternative to Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy - Perinatal Depression (MBCT-PD). Center M shifts treatment to a telehealth model, reduces the number of sessions, and transitions home practice materials to a digital format. This study will include a clinical trial in which participants will be randomized to the Center M treatment with smartphone app delivery of homework compared to treatment as usual (TAU). Type: Interventional Start Date: Feb 2024 |
Implementation of Collaborative Care for Depression in VA HIV Clinics
VA Office of Research and Development
HIV
Depression
HIV Translating Initiatives for Depression into Effective Solutions (HITIDES) is a
team-based service to manage depression in Veterans Living with HIV (VLWH). This service
is more effective for managing depression than the care VLWH usually receive and saves
resources. HITIDES is also liked by HIV1 expand
HIV Translating Initiatives for Depression into Effective Solutions (HITIDES) is a team-based service to manage depression in Veterans Living with HIV (VLWH). This service is more effective for managing depression than the care VLWH usually receive and saves resources. HITIDES is also liked by HIV care providers and VLWH. Despite this, no VA clinics currently offer this service. This study examines two approaches to engage clinics with HITIDES, the resulting effects on VLWH, and the costs of these approaches. The first approach includes recruiting an HIV care provider at the site to help connect with the service and a network of providers to support this person. The second approach uses an additional external expert to facilitate these connections. Understanding how to connect Veterans to the HITIDES service will allow VA to improve depression care for VLWH and save VA resources. Type: Interventional Start Date: Aug 2024 |
Depressed Mood Improvement Through Nicotine Dosing-3 (Depressed MIND3) Extension
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Depressive Disorder
Deficits in cognitive control are core features of late-life depression (LLD),
contributing both to emotion dysregulation and problems with inhibiting irrelevant
information, conflict detection, and working memory. Clinically characterized as
executive dysfunction, these deficits are associated wit1 expand
Deficits in cognitive control are core features of late-life depression (LLD), contributing both to emotion dysregulation and problems with inhibiting irrelevant information, conflict detection, and working memory. Clinically characterized as executive dysfunction, these deficits are associated with poor response to antidepressants and higher levels of disability. Improvement of cognitive control network (CCN) dysfunction may benefit both mood and cognitive performance, however no current pharmacotherapy improves Cognitive Control Network deficits in LLD. The study examines the hypothesis that nicotine acetylcholine receptor agonists enhance Cognitive Control Network function. This effect may resultantly improve mood and cognitive performance in LLD. Small, open-label studies of transdermal nicotine (TDN) patches have supported potential clinical benefit and provided support that transdermal nicotine administration engages the Cognitive Control Network. This is an open-label, extension to the blinded Depressed MIND 3 (Depressed Mood Improvement through nicotine dosing) study. It will evaluate longer-term safety and efficacy of Transdermal Nicotine Patches for potential benefit in cognitive and depression outcomes in elderly depressed participants. Subjects complete blinded randomized trial of Depressed MIND-3 will be eligible for continuation in this extension. This extension study will consist of up to 12 weeks of treatment and a 3 -week safety follow-up period. Type: Interventional Start Date: Apr 2023 |
A Clinical Trial of Tolcapone in Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
University of Chicago
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
OCD
The primary aim of the present study is to examine the efficacy and safety of tolcapone
in adults with moderate to severe OCD. expand
The primary aim of the present study is to examine the efficacy and safety of tolcapone in adults with moderate to severe OCD. Type: Interventional Start Date: Jun 2023 |
Mapping and Modulating the Spatiotemporal Dynamics of Socio-Affective Processing
Baylor College of Medicine
Treatment Resistant Depression
Epilepsy
The overall goal of this study is to map the spatiotemporal dynamics of social affective
processing and to examine selective modulation of these dynamics in humans undergoing
invasive intracranial monitoring for treatment-resistant epilepsy and depression.
Pursuing this signal from a novel platform1 expand
The overall goal of this study is to map the spatiotemporal dynamics of social affective processing and to examine selective modulation of these dynamics in humans undergoing invasive intracranial monitoring for treatment-resistant epilepsy and depression. Pursuing this signal from a novel platform with invasive intracranial recording electrodes provides much-needed spatial and temporal resolution to characterize the neural dynamics of socio-affective processing. The investigators will leverage first-in-human intracranial neural recording opportunities created by a novel therapeutic platform termed "stereotactic electroencephalography-informed deep brain stimulation" (stereo-EEG-informed DBS), as well as the powerful platform of intracranial stereotactic recording and stimulation in patients undergoing epilepsy surgical evaluation at Baylor College of Medicine. The sEEG-informed DBS trial provides unique opportunities for intracranial recording of affect-relevant network regions in patients with treatment-resistant depression (TRD). Recordings in identical regions in epilepsy patients who themselves often demonstrate mild-moderate depressive symptoms will provide a wide dynamic range across the symptom spectrum. To provide critical data on the spatiotemporal dynamics of socio-affective processing the investigators will leverage these two human intracranial recording and stimulation cohorts to study the precise structural, functional, and causal properties of the affective salience network. Greater understanding of the social processing circuitry mediated by the affective salience network may be used to drive therapeutic innovation, pioneering a new paradigm that improves socio-emotional function across a wide variety of neuropsychiatric conditions. The results from this proposal have the potential to improve the lives of patients with dysfunction in social affective processing, with implications for a wide range of neuropsychiatric diseases. Type: Interventional Start Date: Apr 2022 |
Repurposing Low-Dose Clonidine for PTSD in Veterans
Wake Forest University Health Sciences
PTSD
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Sleep
Hypothesis: Veterans with PTSD prescribed clonidine will demonstrate improvements in PTSD
symptoms, including daytime, nighttime, and sleep-related behaviors. expand
Hypothesis: Veterans with PTSD prescribed clonidine will demonstrate improvements in PTSD symptoms, including daytime, nighttime, and sleep-related behaviors. Type: Interventional Start Date: Jun 2023 |
Early Intervention for Youth at High Risk for Bipolar Disorder
University of Pittsburgh
Bipolar Disorder
Investigators will conduct a confirmatory efficacy trial of Interpersonal and Social
Rhythm Therapy (IPSRT) delivered via telehealth for offspring of bipolar parents (OBP;
age 12-18, n=120) at elevated risk for BP onset via risk calculator score. All
participants receive a baseline clinical assessm1 expand
Investigators will conduct a confirmatory efficacy trial of Interpersonal and Social Rhythm Therapy (IPSRT) delivered via telehealth for offspring of bipolar parents (OBP; age 12-18, n=120) at elevated risk for BP onset via risk calculator score. All participants receive a baseline clinical assessment of psychiatric symptoms and sleep disturbance (via objective and subjective methods), followed by a feedback session. Youth are then randomized to receive 8 sessions of IPSRT or a manualized Healthy Lifestyle Behaviors Program (HL) delivered via secure videoconference. As clinically indicated, youth are offered Community Treatment Referral (CTR) for any psychiatric symptoms/disorders identified at intake. Primary outcome domains over 18 months include mania and affective lability. Investigators will also further investigate the hypothesized mechanism underlying IPSRT (i.e., sleep/circadian disruption) across levels of analysis, and the contribution of interpersonal stress to sleep/circadian disruptions. Application of Implementation Science methods throughout maximizes ultimate scalability and feasibility if efficacious. Investigators will also examine whether passive cellphone sensing may serve as a portable, cost-effective measure of mechanisms and outcomes to enhance ultimate dissemination. Type: Interventional Start Date: Sep 2021 |
Meditation Accelerated Brain Stimulation for Depression
University of California, San Diego
Depression
Repetitive Transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) is an FDA-approved treatment for
depression that involves brief magnetic stimulation pulses on the dorsolateral prefrontal
cortex (DLPFC) brain region. The ultimate goal of this treatment is to increase
excitability and long-term plasticity in DLP1 expand
Repetitive Transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) is an FDA-approved treatment for depression that involves brief magnetic stimulation pulses on the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) brain region. The ultimate goal of this treatment is to increase excitability and long-term plasticity in DLPFC, a brain region shown to be hypo-active in depression. Unfortunately, rTMS only has low to moderate efficacy; remission rates for patients range from ~15-30% in large randomized controlled trials. The focus of this research is to develop a next-generation rTMS protocol that is guided by the basic principles underlying brain plasticity, in order to improve the efficacy of rTMS for the treatment of depression. Specifically, in this study the investigators will test rTMS paired with a depression-relevant cognitive state of internal attention. Type: Interventional Start Date: Jul 2021 |
Acute and Long-Term Antidepressant Treatment Success in Adolescents With Anxiety (AtLAS-A)
University of Cincinnati
Anxiety
Depressive Symptoms
Acute, double-blind, adaptively randomized treatment with duloxetine or escitalopram,
followed by open-label naturalistic follow-up. expand
Acute, double-blind, adaptively randomized treatment with duloxetine or escitalopram, followed by open-label naturalistic follow-up. Type: Interventional Start Date: Jan 2020 |
Estrogen and Fear in PTSD
NYU Langone Health
PTSD
The purpose of this research study is to determine if taking a pill of estradiol (E2)
together with prolonged exposure (PE) therapy can improve this treatment outcome in women
diagnosed with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). 80 subjects will take part in this
research study across NYU Langone1 expand
The purpose of this research study is to determine if taking a pill of estradiol (E2) together with prolonged exposure (PE) therapy can improve this treatment outcome in women diagnosed with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). 80 subjects will take part in this research study across NYU Langone Health and UPenn (40 subjects at each site). Participants will be randomized into one of two groups, PE + E2 or PE + placebo. The study will include preliminary screening and baseline visits, experimental visits, and therapy visits over the course of six weeks. Several follow-up visits will take place. Type: Interventional Start Date: Jun 2020 |
Psilocybin for Depression in People With Mild Cognitive Impairment or Early Alzheimer's Disease
Johns Hopkins University
Depressive Symptoms
Depression
Alzheimer Disease
Mild Cognitive Impairment
This open-label pilot study examines whether the hallucinogenic drug, psilocybin, given
under supportive conditions, is safe and effective for depression in people with Mild
Cognitive Impairment (MCI) or early Alzheimer's Disease (AD). This study will also assess
whether psilocybin may improve qual1 expand
This open-label pilot study examines whether the hallucinogenic drug, psilocybin, given under supportive conditions, is safe and effective for depression in people with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) or early Alzheimer's Disease (AD). This study will also assess whether psilocybin may improve quality of life in those individuals. Type: Interventional Start Date: Mar 2021 |
Development Of a Virtual Stress Inoculation Training (SIT) Platform and Mobile Health App
The University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston
PTSD
Trauma and Stressor Related Disorders
Traumatic Brain Injury
The purpose of this study is to demonstrate the feasibility and utility of SIT delivered
asynchronously (self-paced) via fully virtual platform with and without the aid of a
mobile health application and to determine initial change over baseline in terms of
reduction in PTSD symptoms and improvemen1 expand
The purpose of this study is to demonstrate the feasibility and utility of SIT delivered asynchronously (self-paced) via fully virtual platform with and without the aid of a mobile health application and to determine initial change over baseline in terms of reduction in PTSD symptoms and improvement in resiliency in participants receiving the virtual SIT prototype, using Linear Mixed Models (LMMs), Type: Interventional Start Date: May 2024 |
Study of Lumateperone in the Treatment of Patients With Bipolar Mania
Intra-Cellular Therapies, Inc.
Bipolar Disorder, Manic
This is a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, study in the acute
treatment of patients with a diagnosis of bipolar I disorder with manic episodes or manic
episodes with mixed features (bipolar mania), with or without psychotic symptoms,
according to criteria of the Diagnostic1 expand
This is a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, study in the acute treatment of patients with a diagnosis of bipolar I disorder with manic episodes or manic episodes with mixed features (bipolar mania), with or without psychotic symptoms, according to criteria of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM 5). Type: Interventional Start Date: Jul 2024 |
iExposure Intervention for Social Anxiety
Palo Alto University
Social Anxiety
Social anxiety (SA) is a highly prevalent mental health concern, thought to
disproportionately affect youth with recent international estimates of more than 30% of
individuals reporting clinically elevated symptoms. Despite the prevalence of SA, as few
as one in five individuals receive care, due t1 expand
Social anxiety (SA) is a highly prevalent mental health concern, thought to disproportionately affect youth with recent international estimates of more than 30% of individuals reporting clinically elevated symptoms. Despite the prevalence of SA, as few as one in five individuals receive care, due to limited access to evidence-based treatments. Additionally there has been a notable increase in social anxiety since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. This proposal will use iExposure to develop a personalized mechanism-focused approach to optimizing treatment response for individuals with social anxiety by testing standard iExposure against two augmentations that incorporate distinct attention mechanisms (attention guidance and attention control). Type: Interventional Start Date: Jul 2024 |
Multicenter Study of Lumateperone for the Treatment of Bipolar Depression in Pediatric Patients
Intra-Cellular Therapies, Inc.
Bipolar Depression
This is a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study in pediatric
patients who are experiencing major depressive episodes (MDEs) associated with a primary
diagnosis of bipolar I or bipolar II disorder as confirmed by Kiddie Schedule for
Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia for1 expand
This is a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study in pediatric patients who are experiencing major depressive episodes (MDEs) associated with a primary diagnosis of bipolar I or bipolar II disorder as confirmed by Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia for School-Age Children-Present and Lifetime Version (K-SADS-PL), according to criteria of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM 5). Type: Interventional Start Date: May 2024 |
A Study to Assess the Efficacy, Safety, and Tolerability of Oral NORA520 in Adults With Severe Post1
Gerbera Therapeutics, Inc.
Depression, Postpartum
Postpartum Depression
Post-partum Depression
Postnatal Depression
Post-Natal Depression
The purpose of this research study is to test the study drug, NORA520, as a possible
treatment for severe postpartum depression (PPD). The trial aims to determine:
- How well NORA520 is tolerated and what side effects it may cause
- If NORA520 reduces depressive symptoms in subjects with se1 expand
The purpose of this research study is to test the study drug, NORA520, as a possible treatment for severe postpartum depression (PPD). The trial aims to determine: - How well NORA520 is tolerated and what side effects it may cause - If NORA520 reduces depressive symptoms in subjects with severe PPD - The amount of NORA520 in the blood at various times after taking the study drug; this provides information that helps determine how often NORA520 should be taken - In a subset of subjects, the amount of NORA520 in breastmilk at various times after taking it to determine if and how much NORA520 can pass into breastmilk Participate in this study will be randomly assigned to one of 3 different groups. All subjects will take the study drug for 3 days. Type: Interventional Start Date: Mar 2024 |
SMILE: Clinical Trial to Evaluate Mindfulness as Intervention for Racial and Ethnic Populations Dur1
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Anxiety
COVID-19 Pandemic
The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate the SMILE app, a Digital Health Platform
(DHP), that will deliver a mindfulness intervention, designed to mitigate COVID-19
related stress. Additionally, the SMILE app will remotely collect self-reported
psychological and physiological metrics of menta1 expand
The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate the SMILE app, a Digital Health Platform (DHP), that will deliver a mindfulness intervention, designed to mitigate COVID-19 related stress. Additionally, the SMILE app will remotely collect self-reported psychological and physiological metrics of mental health and autonomic regulation. Study participants are adults who self-identify as African American, Black and/or Latino, and who have clinically significant levels of anxiety. The study aims are: - Aim 1: Establish the effectiveness and durability of an 8-week Mindfulness DHP intervention. The investigators will focus on two constructs important to mental health and hypothesize that: A) Anxiety, self-report stress and quality-of-life measures will significantly improve when comparing: A.1) Pre-to-post intervention, and; A.2) Control vs. intervention groups over 8 weeks and at 1-month follow-up. B) Arousal, autonomic indices of HRV (reflecting parasympathetic activation) will significantly improve, when comparing: B.1) Pre-to-post intervention, and; B.2) Control vs. intervention groups over 8 weeks and at 1-month follow-up. - Aim 2: Establish the sustainability of two Mindfulness DHP interventions utilizing retention, usage (frequency), and participant satisfaction. - Aim 3: Examine associations between COVID-19 related stress, mental health outcomes, and HRV. Examine the extent to which COVID-19 related stress and mental health symptoms are linked to HRV at baseline and how that relationship changes over time. Participants will be assigned to 1 of 3 arms of the study: MTIA intervention, MAPP intervention, or wait-list control. All participants will be mailed a device with the SMILE app installed, and the equipment for recording cardiac data in the home. All participants will complete the baseline psychometrics measures and physiological stress test using the instructions provided on the SMILE app. Those assigned to the MTIA or MAPP intervention groups will then participate in their assigned intervention over the subsequent 8 weeks. During these 8 weeks, psychometric and physiological data will be completed biweekly for all participants. 3 months following the initial baseline, all participants will complete a final psychometric/physiological evaluation. Type: Interventional Start Date: May 2024 |
Study on Allopregnanolone and Depression in Women Across the Menopause Transition
Brigham and Women's Hospital
Depression
This study aims to identify how enhanced allopregnanolone activity (via pregnenolone)
affects behavior and neurobiology that may underlie perimenopausal depression. expand
This study aims to identify how enhanced allopregnanolone activity (via pregnenolone) affects behavior and neurobiology that may underlie perimenopausal depression. Type: Interventional Start Date: May 2024 |
BRSR: Feasibility and Acceptability Pilot
University of California, San Francisco
Psychosocial Functioning
Surgery
Older Adults
Physical Function
Postoperative Outcome
The goal of this clinical trial is to test problem solving therapy (PST) in older adults
who are undergoing major surgery. The main question it aims to answer is:
• What is the feasibility and acceptability of delivering PST to older surgical patients
with depressive symptoms or report lacking soc1 expand
The goal of this clinical trial is to test problem solving therapy (PST) in older adults who are undergoing major surgery. The main question it aims to answer is: • What is the feasibility and acceptability of delivering PST to older surgical patients with depressive symptoms or report lacking social support in the pre-operative and post-operative setting? Type: Interventional Start Date: Jun 2024 |
Intervention to Enhance Coping and Help-seeking Among Youth in Foster Care
Portland State University
Adolescent Behavior
Psychosocial Functioning
Coping Behavior
Help-Seeking Behavior
Utilization, Health Care
This study will deploy a scalable secondary prevention program that leverages existing
foster youth transition services to improve mental health functioning and service use
before and after exiting foster care. Our short-term objective is to remotely test a
group intervention called Stronger Youth1 expand
This study will deploy a scalable secondary prevention program that leverages existing foster youth transition services to improve mental health functioning and service use before and after exiting foster care. Our short-term objective is to remotely test a group intervention called Stronger Youth Networks and Coping (SYNC) that targets cognitive schemas influencing stress responses, including mental health help-seeking and service engagement, among foster youth with behavioral health risk. SYNC aims to increase youth capacity to appraise stress and regulate emotional responses, to flexibly select adaptive coping strategies, and to promote informal and formal help-seeking as an effective coping strategy. The proposed aims will establish whether the 10-module program engages the targeted proximal mechanisms with a signal of efficacy on clinically-relevant outcomes, and whether a fully-powered randomized control trial (RCT) of SYNC is feasible in the intended service context. Our first aim is to refine our SYNC curriculum and training materials, prior to testing SYNC in a remote single-arm trial with two cohorts of 8-10 Oregon foster youth aged 16-20 (N=16). Our second aim is to conduct a remote two-arm individually-randomized group treatment trial with Oregon foster youth aged 16-20 with indicated behavioral health risk (N=80) to examine: (a) intervention group change on proximal mechanisms of coping self-efficacy and help-seeking attitudes, compared to services-as-usual at post-intervention and 6-month follow-up: and (b) association between the mechanisms and targeted outcomes, including emotional regulation, coping behaviors, mental health service use, and symptoms of depression, anxiety, and PTSD. Our third aim is to refine and standardize the intervention and research protocol for an effectiveness trial, including confirming transferability with national stakeholders. Type: Interventional Start Date: Apr 2024 |
Project 2: Optimizing Engagement and Outcomes in STAND Digital Therapy
University of California, Los Angeles
Depression
Anxiety
The goal is to optimize peer coaching in order to optimize engagement and outcomes in
digital therapy. The unmet mental health needs of community college students are
staggering and a growing body of research demonstrates that therapy provided digitally
with the assistance of trained community memb1 expand
The goal is to optimize peer coaching in order to optimize engagement and outcomes in digital therapy. The unmet mental health needs of community college students are staggering and a growing body of research demonstrates that therapy provided digitally with the assistance of trained community members without advanced degrees in mental health is an effective and scalable way to address these needs. Despite being effective for improving symptoms and functioning in those who engage in it, uptake and engagement in digital therapy is generally quite low. Recent research suggests that this is especially true of Latinx individuals, who tend to have unique and significant unmet mental health needs. To address these issues, Project 2 will examine treatment engagement, treatment satisfaction, symptoms and functioning outcomes among Latinx students at East Los Angeles College (ELAC) receiving digital therapy with peer coaching in the STAND program. Type: Interventional Start Date: Apr 2023 |
Resiliency in U.S. Air Force Personnel
University of New Mexico
Stress
Quality
Anxiety
Resilience
The goal of this clinical trial is to examine the effectiveness of the Stress Management
and Resilience Training (SMART) in increasing resilience in a population of U.S. Air
Force personnel at Joint Base Andrews, Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, Nellis Air Force
Base, and Wright-Patterson Air Force1 expand
The goal of this clinical trial is to examine the effectiveness of the Stress Management and Resilience Training (SMART) in increasing resilience in a population of U.S. Air Force personnel at Joint Base Andrews, Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, Nellis Air Force Base, and Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. When delivered in real-world conditions, to what extent does SMART increase levels of resiliency and decrease levels of stress in a sample of active component U.S. Air Force personnel? 2. Does SMART have a sustained effectiveness from baseline to 12, 24 and 36-weeks after training completion in a sample of active component U.S. Air Force personnel? 3. Does SMART provided via an in-person/video-teleconference (VTC) or Computer-Based Training (CBT) modality demonstrate equivalent effectiveness in increasing resilience and decreasing stress in active component Air Force personnel? Participants will be asked to complete a pre-intervention survey, complete the assigned modality of SMART ( in-person/VTC or CBT), and complete follow-up measurements at 12-, 24-, and 36-weeks post-intervention completion. Researchers will compare in-person/VTC and CBT groups' measurements to see if a difference in self-reported resilience, stress, anxiety, or quality of life is present pre-intervention. Researchers will compare in-person/VTC and CBT groups' measurements to see if a difference in self-reported resilience, stress, anxiety, or quality of life is present post-intervention. Type: Interventional Start Date: Oct 2023 |
Healthcare Providers as Trusted Messengers to Increase Receipt of Tax Credits Among Low-income Fami1
University of California, Los Angeles
Depression
Child Development
Stress
Physical Illness
Health Care Utilization
The purpose of this study is to pilot test the feasibility, acceptability, and
preliminary efficacy of healthcare provider referrals to a tax filing app within
parent-child health programs to test whether such referrals can increase receipt of tax
credits among low-income parents. The study will us1 expand
The purpose of this study is to pilot test the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of healthcare provider referrals to a tax filing app within parent-child health programs to test whether such referrals can increase receipt of tax credits among low-income parents. The study will use a single-group, pre/post test design with a sample of approximately 100 women who have a child under 6 years of age. Participants will be recruited from parental-child health programs and clinics in Los Angeles and will complete surveys at baseline, immediately after tax filing season, and six months after tax filing season to assess 1) frequency of tax filing after referral (Feasibility), 2) the acceptability of the tax filing app from the perspective of users (Acceptability), and 3) pre/posttest changes to parent and child health, child development, and healthcare utilization measures for users (preliminary efficacy). Type: Interventional Start Date: Jan 2023 |
Study of a PST-Trained Voice-Enabled Artificial Intelligence Counselor(SPEAC) for Adults With Emoti1
University of Illinois at Chicago
Depression
Anxiety
Approximately 200 Participants with mild-to-moderate, untreated depression and/or anxiety
will be randomly assigned (by chance, like flipping a coin) to 1 of 3 study groups: Lumen
Coached Problem-Solving Treatment (PST) (n=100), Human Coached PST (n=50), and optional
(delayed) Lumen Coached PST as1 expand
Approximately 200 Participants with mild-to-moderate, untreated depression and/or anxiety will be randomly assigned (by chance, like flipping a coin) to 1 of 3 study groups: Lumen Coached Problem-Solving Treatment (PST) (n=100), Human Coached PST (n=50), and optional (delayed) Lumen Coached PST as waitlist control (n=50) to improve emotional health. All participants will complete assessments at baseline and at 18 weeks post randomization. Depending on the group assignment the PST program will be delivered by Lumen, a virtual voice-based coach on a study iPad, or by a human coach in person for the first session and then via videoconference or phone for the remaining 7 sessions. Participants assigned to the waitlist control group can receive the Lumen coached PST on a study iPad after completing their 18-week follow-up assessment. Participants will receive 8 coaching sessions to learn problem-solving skills and work on unresolved problems in daily living that may be interfering with their emotional well-being and contributing to depression and anxiety symptoms. Type: Interventional Start Date: Jan 2023 |
- Previous
- Next