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Tundra lists 3 Personality Disorder, Borderline clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.
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NCT06251908
REWRITALIZE Your Recovery - Evaluation of a Creative Writing Group Intervention
Health institutes call for psychosocial interventions and recovery-oriented approaches as supplement to pharmacological treatment for mental health disorders. Participatory art interventions have been suggested to be promising in promoting recovery by stimulating connectedness, hope, renegotiation of identity, participatory meaning-making and empowerment. Moreover, cognitive literature studies suggest there might be potential benefits of engaging with literature in terms of improved cognition and social cognition. In spite of promising findings, the evidence base is still thin. We have developed REWRITALIZE (REWR), a manualised, recovery-oriented fifteen-session participatory creative writing group intervention, led by a professional author and attended by a mental health professional. The intervention comprises introduction to literary forms, spontaneous writing on those forms, sharing texts and engaging in reflective discussions about them. It is designed to provide a holding and non-stigmatising environment. The aim of the present study is to evaluate REWR for persons with severe mental illness. This study is a randomised controlled clinical trial (RCT) with an embedded pilot RCT focusing on clinical and personal recovery. This study is an investigator-initiated, randomised, two-arm, single-blinded, multi-center, waiting list trial. Participants (n=266) with severe mental illness (\>18 yrs.) will be recruited at six psychiatric centres in region Zealand and randomised to active (creative writing group + treatment as usual) or control (waiting list + treatment as usual) condition. Assessments will be collected pre- and post-intervention and six months after end of intervention. The primary outcome measure will be the questionnaire of the process of recovery administered at the end of the intervention. Secondary outcome measures comprise measures of recovery, self-efficacy and mentalising assessed at the end of the intervention and six months after the intervention ends. The post-intervention measures will be compared between active and control groups by means of independent sample t-tests. The pilot RCT will focus on a subset of participants (n=70) with schizophrenia spectrum disorders (18-35 yrs), evaluating exploratory outcome measures related perspective-taking, social cognition, cognitive function, psychosocial functioning, and symptom level.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2026-02-04
2 states
NCT06983002
Bridging Affect Consciousness, Mentalization and Trauma- Exploring an Integrative Treatment Approach for Personality Disorder (PD).
Study background: Specialized Group Outpatient Clinic within specialist mental health services, tailoring two year group treatment programmes for severe Avoidant PD (AvPD) and Borderline PD (BPD) with Affect Consciousness (AC) targeting specific areas of emotional dysfunction. Aims: Our main hypothesis, adding AC to Mentalization- based treatment (MBT) to expand the breadth and depth of therapeutically productive work on affect, will aim to examine health indicators, processes and mechanisms of change in depth. The study will extracts preliminary data after 5 years and 10 years to investigate clinical change, variation and outcome during MBT for PD employing AC as add on to MBT. The study has a randomized controlled trail design, with MBT with or without AC as add-on. The RCT is grounded on original literature on Affect Theory, as a framework for understanding patient functioning, and MBT, framing the therapy.Implications: AC methodology as add on can lead to more tailored treatment programmes, service planning, allocation of resources, guidelines, ACI certification and method development for PDs.
Gender: All
Ages: 20 Years - 40 Years
Updated: 2025-05-21
1 state
NCT05765864
Self-harm Behaviour Among the Most At-risk Adolescents
In the proposed study, three objectives will be pursued: 1. To develop a method to identify more effectively the acute and long-term risk of adolescents with the most threatening self-harm behaviours. 2. To identify the factors that influence the risk of self-harm behaviours and the success of treatment/treatment of these behaviours in the most at-risk adolescents (changes in these factors). 3. Develop guidelines for more effective treatment of the most at-risk adolescents. For this purpose, a sample of approximately 200 young people who will be hospitalised for suicide risk (the most at risk in Slovenia) and an approximately equal number of healthy adolescents will be included. At inclusion, the presence of several factors will be assessed by reviewing demographic data, clinical diagnosis, self-assessment questionnaires and clinical psychological tests (CSSRS, B-NSSI-AT, ISAS, LPFS-BF2.0, BPFSC-11, TSCC, PAI, ECR-RS, DASA-YV, ASHRS), social assessment, and blood sampling for genetic analyses (DNA isolation, sequencing, nucleotide sequence recognition, quantification and evaluation of short tandem repeats, identification of methylation sites). Longitudinal tracking of autoaggressive events and heteroaggressive events during hospitalisation will be performed and recorded on an ongoing basis. The risk and protective factors of the adolescents most at risk will be compared with a control group of adolescents. The same factors will be reassessed in the most at-risk adolescents after 6 and 18 months of treatment as usual. The data will be collected in a data entry and storage system that will ensure the privacy of the data entered in accordance with the GDPR. This will allow the investigators to identify young people at particular risk of severe self-harm behaviour more reliably, to target them for more intensive and effective treatment, and thus to improve their safety, quality of life and prognosis in the short and long term.
Gender: All
Ages: 13 Years - 18 Years
Updated: 2025-03-28