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Clinical Research Directory

Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.

9 clinical studies listed.

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Mental Health Care

Tundra lists 9 Mental Health Care clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.

This data is also available as a public JSON API. AI systems and LLMs are encouraged to use it for structured queries.

ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING

NCT06874439

An Evaluation of the WHO QUAlityRights Program

The World Health Organization's (WHO) QualityRights (QR) program offers assessments and recommendations to help mental health facilities, on a voluntary basis, improve their care practices towards better respect of the rights of service users. The aim of this study is to evaluate the QR program in a French national context. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Does the QR program improve perceived satisfaction with care among mental health service users? * What are the implementation procedures of the program? * What is its budgetary impact? Researchers will compare the QR program intervention with usual practices.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-12-04

Recovery
Organization of Health Service
Mental Health Care
+1
RECRUITING

NCT07219264

Mental Health CPR for Cancer Survivors

This is a parallel, two-arm interventional study comparing the Mental Health CPR behavioral intervention to standard community health education. The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if Mental Health CPR program, a culturally and linguistically adapted behavioral intervention, helps improve emotional well-being and access to mental health services among Hispanic/Latino cancer survivors in Puerto Rico. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Does Mental Health CPR help more people complete psychological distress screening? * Does it help more participants connect with psycho-oncology services? Researchers will compare the Mental Health CPR program to standard community health education to determine whether it improves emotional well-being, enhances communication between patients and caregivers, reduces negative attitudes toward mental health care, and lowers emotional distress levels. Participants will: * Attend community sessions led by trained Community Mental Health Workers (CMHWs) * Receive printed materials and educational resources * Take part in brief follow-ups over about 36 weeks

Gender: All

Ages: 21 Years - 99 Years

Updated: 2025-10-21

1 state

Mental Health Care
Mental Health
Depression Anxiety Disorder
RECRUITING

NCT05181982

Evaluation of a Flexible and Integrative Psychiatric Care Model at the Pfalzklinikum (EVA_Pfalz)

This study is an evaluation of the flexible and integrative psychiatric care model (according to § 64b of the German Social Code Book V (SGB V)) (FIT) at the Pfalzklinikum. The central concern of this evaluation is to answer the question whether the FIT model offer advantages over standard care. The orientation of model care is a more cross-sectoral provision of services through more flexible treatment intensities.

Gender: All

Updated: 2025-08-24

Mental Health Care
RECRUITING

NCT06886165

My Avenue to helP - Adaptive Mentalization-based Integrative Treatment Compared to Management as Usual for Youths With Multiple Problems: a Non-Randomized Controlled Feasibility Trial

My Avenue to HelP (MAP) is a non-randomized feasibility study testing the implementation of a cross-sectoral collaboration targeted youths, aged 12-17 years, with multiple social and psychological problems. MAP is a one-year intervention based on Adaptive Mentalization-Based Integrative Treatment (AMBIT). MAP is not a new treatment method, but rather a new way of offering and organizing support in the existing network around the young person. The objective is to create a new way for professionals across sectors to collaborate in supporting our most vulnerable youth. Thereby, the investigators aim to benefit the youths by incorporating a mentalizing stance to promote lasting changes beyond the intervention period. The MAP Project will run from 2025 to 2027. The research will consist of two work packages (WPs) * WP1 will test the feasibility of the MAP project examining a) whether young people can be successfully recruited to the project b) if the evaluation design and methods are feasible and c) if the intervention is feasible to participants and employees (quantitatively). * WP2 will assess implementation determinants and evaluate the implementation strategies employed in the project. Furthermore, the acceptability of the intervention will qualitatively be assessed by interviews with selected participants, their parents, as well as employees. Participants: In total 60 youths aged 12-17 years from Region Zealand, Denmark: * 40 youths will be enrolled and receive the one-year MAP Intervention; 30 youths residing in Roskilde Municipality and 10 residing in Lejre Municipality * 20 youths from other municipalities in Region Zealand will be included in the trial as a control group. To assess the nature and extent of the mental health problems and potential psychiatric disorders among the participating youths, the parents and the young person will be asked to complete an online questionnaire (Development and Well-Being Assessment (DAWBA)).

Gender: All

Ages: 12 Years - 17 Years

Updated: 2025-08-11

1 state

Mental Health Care
AMBIT
Adaptive Mentalization-Based Integrative Treatment
+6
NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT07050342

Evaluation of the Specialized Clinic for Nutrition and Mental Health: A Pilot Study

The goal of this observational pilot study is to learn how personalized nutrition-focused care can help people with mental and psychosomatic health problems. This study takes place in Europe's first outpatient clinic that focuses on how diet affects mental well-being. The main questions the study aims to answer are: Does care at this clinic help lower participants' stress levels over one year? Do participants report better mental health, resilience, and quality of life during the study? Are improvements in mental health linked to changes in diet and blood markers like inflammation? Participants will: Fill out online questionnaires every 3 months over one year. These ask about stress, physical symptoms, quality of life, diet, and satisfaction with care. Give small blood samples during their regular clinic visits. These samples will be checked for common health markers such as inflammation. This study will help researchers understand whether nutrition-focused care can support mental and physical health, and whether this approach should be tested in larger future studies.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 65 Years

Updated: 2025-07-03

1 state

Psychosomatic Disorders
Mental Health Care
RECRUITING

NCT07008950

Self-efficacy and Knowledge (SEEK) Trial to Improve Sexual Reproductive Health and Well-being for Syrian Refugee Women and Girls in Lebanon

This community-based randomized controlled trial (RCT) aims to evaluate a low-resource/low-intensity integrated sexual reproductive health (SRH) and wellbeing intervention package. It will be delivered in Primary Healthcare Centres (PHCs) in a rural area in Lebanon to Syrian refugee women and girls aged 15-24.

Gender: FEMALE

Ages: 15 Years - 15 Years

Updated: 2025-06-06

Mental Health Care
Sexual Health Quality of Life
Family Planning Services
ENROLLING BY INVITATION

NCT06989476

Process Mapping to Optimize Child Psychosocial Screenings in Primary Care, and Increase Family Service Linkages

Many families screened in primary care for social challenges to identify psychosocial needs of caregivers and children do not receive the follow-up support they need. This study will test a new clinic-based approach, CARELOOP, designed to improve how families are referred to and connected with services. Using community input and a method called Process Service Mapping, the project will tailor clinic workflows and evaluate the approach's impact through a randomized trial. The goal is to improve care coordination and reduce health disparities.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-05-25

1 state

Mental Health Care
RECRUITING

NCT06651801

Feasibility and Acceptability of Group Medical Visits for Anxiety and Depression

The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of the intervention, Group Medical Visits (GMVs), for patients with depression and anxiety. It also aims to get some initial information on the effectiveness of GMVs on reducing depression and anxiety scores, which will help inform power calculations for a future larger randomized controlled trial (RCT). The main question it aims to answer is: * Are GMVs feasible and acceptable to patients with depression and anxiety? This study consists of a pilot RCT with an intervention and control arm. At enrollment, participants will be randomized to the intervention group, 6 months of GMVs, or to the control group, which consists of "standard client services". For the GMV group, participants will engage in a biweekly virtual group that is similar to a standard psychiatric follow-up. Participants in the control group will receive standard care after a psychiatric assessment, which includes follow-up with their primary care provider (family physician or nurse practitioner), individual psychiatric care if suggested by the psychiatrist who did their psychiatric assessment, and/or a referral to publicly funded therapy groups if interested.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-05-13

1 state

Mental Health Care
Anxiety and Depression
Pilot Study
NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT06846918

HIIT Vs Snack Exercises on the Academic Stress of University Students

Mental health among Chilean university students has steadily deteriorated since 2020. One of the factors associated with mental health is the academic workload that comes with transitioning from high school to higher education, which may lead to an increase in stress levels due to university life referred to as academic stress. Academic stress has been linked to multiple negative outcomes in university students, such as a lower quality of life, as well as cardiovascular risk markers, including body composition (e.g., higher fat percentage), muscle function, aerobic capacity, and physical activity levels. Academic stress affecting more than 50% of university students represents a health issue that needs to be addressed, not only because it can lead to chronic stress, but also because it increases cardiovascular risk in a Chilean population where more than 10,000,000 people are overweight, obese, or have insufficient physical activity levels. Academic stress and its associated complications represent a prevalent health issue among university students. It is essential to implement interventions that help reduce academic stress while also counteracting its negative effects on quality of life, body composition, muscle function, aerobic capacity, and physical activity levels. Cost-effective tools, both in terms of financial resources and time, are needed. From this perspective, physical exercise meets both requirements, as it is inexpensive to implement and there are various protocols such as high-intensity interval training and "exercise snacks" that can require less than 40 minutes per week while providing beneficial effects on academic stress, body composition muscle function, aerobic capacity, and physical activity levels in university students. Expanding the body of evidence on these different training protocols would allow us to address multiple issues simultaneously. The primary one is academic stress and its related consequences, but also to generate new evidence on aspects not yet covered in the current literature, such as the impact on university students' quality of life, and to provide an accessible treatment tool for the future. Importantly, implementing these short-duration programs would also enable students to maintain their academic responsibilities, as the proposed protocols require no more than 40 minutes per week (\<10 minutes per day). Finally, these programs could be implemented within university facilities, which, in the long term, could become a permanent tool for improving students' university experience.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 30 Years

Updated: 2025-02-28

1 state

Mental Health
Mental Health Care
Physical Inactivity
+2