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NCT06994715
This study will be conducted in a randomized controlled experimental design to examine the effects of acupressure applied to patients treated in the intensive care unit on physiological parameters, pain, sleep quality, anxiety and perception of nurse presence. The study will be conducted with 60 patients (20 intervention, 20 placebo, 20 control groups) treated in the 2nd stage Intensive Care Unit of an University Hospital between May 2025 and January 2026. Acupressure will be applied to the intervention group for 2 days, morning and evening, for four sessions. For four sessions, pseudo acupressure will be used on the placebo group for 2 days, morning and evening. No application will be made to the control group. The data collection tools in the study are the Patient Identifier Information Form, Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), Visual Assessment Scale (VAS), Physiological Parameter Assessment Form, Richards-Campbell Sleep Scale, Spielberg State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, and Nurse Presence Scale (PONS).
NCT07481643
In pregnant women, non-pharmacological methods such as music, massage, yoga, meditation, relaxation breathing exercises, and acupuncture have been tried to reduce anxiety during childbirth, and there are studies on these in the literature. However, researchers have not come across a study in the literature that evaluates the effect of positive affirmations on perioperative maternal anxiety and breastfeeding together. Researchers aim is to evaluate the relationship between anxiety, sedation, and breastfeeding levels in pregnant women who underwent positive affirmations and music therapy during cesarean section.
NCT06842394
This randomized controlled trial investigates whether an adaptive e-learning program on acute and time critical medical conditions can reduce state anxiety and improve the competence of junior doctors working in emergency departments. Junior doctors assigned to frontline shifts will be enrolled and randomized into two groups: an intervention group receiving the e-learning program within the first six weeks of employment and a control group receiving standard onboarding with delayed access to the program. The primary outcome is the change in state anxiety levels, assessed using the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI-6). Secondary outcomes include perceived self-efficacy during shifts and self-assessed competency improvements.
NCT07481903
This clinical trial aims to assess whether electroacupuncture (EA) can alleviate the psychoneurological symptom cluster (including pain, fatigue, insomnia, anxiety, depression and subjective cognitive decline) in breast cancer survivors, and to evaluate the safety of this therapy. Researchers will conduct a randomized controlled trial of electroacupuncture (EA) as compared to sham electroacupuncture (SA) in breast cancer survivors with the psychoneurological symptom cluster who are currently being treated with endocrine therapy. Participants will receive 16 treatments over 8 weeks. The EA group will receive true acupuncture with continuous wave stimulation (2Hz, intensity as tolerated) administered for 30 minutes per session. The SA group will receive sham acupuncture using blunt (non-penetrating) needles that contact the skin without penetration, along with a 30-second transient device activation instead of the 30-minute continuous stimulation. Treatment outcomes for pain, fatigue, insomnia, anxiety, depression and subjective cognitive function will be assessed. The primary outcome is response rate of the psychoneurological symptom cluster after 8 weeks of treatment. Secondary outcomes include changes from baseline in the scores of each of the six psychoneurological symptoms.
NCT06053307
In this study, using three phases, the investigators will use an iterative development approach to refine a behavioral intervention for managing concomitant psychosocial distress in glaucoma. Phase 1: The investigators will begin by developing a baseline intervention using strategies from Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), and delivered using a mobile application. Phase 2: The investigators will refine the baseline intervention for glaucoma patients using qualitative interviews conducted with primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) patients with psychosocial distress (N=20), and health professionals (N=5). Phase 3: Finally, the investigators will measure acceptability and feasibility of the refined intervention through a single-armed pilot study (N=25). The investigators hypothesize that the refined intervention will yield an acceptable and feasible intervention in a POAG patient population, setting the stage for a future efficacy study.
NCT07449013
This research was designed as a randomized controlled experimental study to determine the effects of laughter yoga and emotional freedom techniques(EFT) on anxiety in pregnant women.
NCT07476469
This study investigates if anhedonia and anxiety symptoms are associated with alterations in reinforcement learning, effort trade-offs for wins vs. punishments, and foraging behavior under threat. Moreover, it will investigate whether these processes can be influenced by a metabolic load and/or transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation (tVNS). The project consists of (a) an online reinforcement learning study, used to characterize learning, reward sensitivity, and meta-cognition, and (b) a laboratory study in which participants first undergo fMRI while completing an effort-based decision-making task. Second, participants will complete two sessions in VR with randomized active or sham tVNS during a foraging task before and after a caloric load with concurrent physiological recordings.
NCT07475975
The purpose of this clinical trial is to learn whether the use of a "cold and arm sling elevation pillow" affects anxiety and comfort levels in children aged 7-12 years undergoing surgery for upper extremity fractures. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Does the use of a cold and arm sling elevation pillow reduce postoperative anxiety levels in children? * Does the use of a cold and arm sling elevation pillow increase postoperative comfort levels in children? Researchers will compare the experimental group (using the specially designed cold and arm sling elevation pillow) with the control group (receiving standard clinical care, including standard pillows and separate ice packs) to see the effects of the integrated pillow on anxiety and comfort. Participants will: * Receive education before surgery based on their randomly assigned group (experimental or control), * Use the assigned elevation and cold application method for the first 24 hours following surgery, * Complete anxiety and comfort assessment scales at four different time points: before the intervention, just before surgery, 6 hours after surgery, and at the time of discharge.
NCT07478393
This study is an open trial designed to examine individual changes that occur before, during, and after 6 modules of Emotion Regulation Therapy (ERT) delivered via telehealth for individuals in New York State who are experiencing elevated worry, rumination, or self-criticism.
NCT06801132
The goal of this clinical trial is to examine the effectiveness of the online self-delivered death anxiety intervention developed by our team in the general population with a randomized controlled trial. The study will recruit 50 participants, with 25 randomized to the death anxiety intervention group and 25 randomized to the control group (waiting list). The online intervention on death anxiety consists of 4 phases that take about 2 hours in total. The primary outcome DAS (Death Anxiety Scale) and DABBS (Death Anxiety Beliefs and Behaviors Scale) will be administered on baseline, post-treatment, 1-week follow-up, and 2-week follow-up assessments.
NCT07466979
The Physical Exercise on Women's Affective and Physical HeAlth (Exer-WAPA) project is a randomized controlled trial (RCT) designed to evaluate the effects of a supervised, group-based exercise program incorporating music-synchronized movement on the emotional and physical health of physically inactive, middle-aged women (35-60 years) experiencing psychological distress. The primary outcome will be emotional well-being, assessed at baseline and post-intervention using the Spanish version of the Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS). Secondary outcomes are grouped into five dimensions: (1) mental health, (2) physical health, (3) lifestyle, (4) gender-related outcomes, and (5) socioeconomic impact. Mental health outcomes include risk of poor mental health (GHQ-12), self-esteem (Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale), global life satisfaction (Satisfaction with Life Scale, SWLS), anxiety symptoms (Beck Anxiety Inventory, BAI), depressive symptoms (Beck Depression Inventory-II, BDI-II), and general cognitive status (Montreal Cognitive Assessment, MoCA). Physical health outcomes include health-related body composition (bioimpedance) and anthropometric indicators, health-related physical fitness (cardiorespiratory fitness, muscular strength, flexibility, and agility), cardiometabolic risk (blood pressure), autonomic cardiovascular function (heart rate variability), static posture (OSPAT). Lifestyle outcomes include physical activity and sedentary behaviour (Axivity accelerometers and IPAQ), sleep quality (Axivity accelerometers and Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, PSQI), commuting behaviour, dietary habits (Mediterranean Diet Adherence Questionnaire, PREDIMED), health-related quality of life (SF-36), and tobacco and alcohol consumption (AUDIT-C). Gender-related outcomes include gender norms, caregiving responsibilities, reproductive health, social support (GVHR questionnaire), and menopause-related quality of life (MENQOL). The socioeconomic impact of the intervention will be evaluated through a cost-effectiveness analysis. A total of 100 participants will be recruited and randomly assigned to either an experimental group (GEx), receiving a 12-week supervised exercise intervention, or a waitlist control group (GC). The intervention follows World Health Organization (WHO) recommendations for physical activity (three sessions per week, 60 minutes per session; 180 minutes per week), with exercise intensity prescribed using heart rate reserve (50-85% HRR). Outcomes will be assessed at baseline, post-intervention, and three months after the intervention, following a 2 × 3 study design. In addition, adherence and compliance outcomes related to the exercise intervention will also be assessed, including attendance and punctuality at sessions, additional physical activity outside the training sessions, mood before and after each exercise session (Feeling Scale), perceived exhaustion prior to the start of each session (item 8 of the HPHEE Scale), adverse events, and subjective session effort (Borg Rating of Perceived Exertion, RPE 0-10). Additionally, immediately after the completion of the intervention, experimental group participants will complete an exercise enjoyment questionnaire. Furthermore, a focus group will be conducted with a subsample of participants from the experimental group to explore their experiences with the intervention program.
NCT07464158
The purpose of the study is to investigate and compare the effects of three different versions of a future imaginal writing exercise (worst-case scenario, neutral future scenario, best-case scenario) for individuals with elevated social anxiety symptoms. Participants (N=270) will be recruited through the online platform, Prolific, and will be randomly assigned to one of three writing exercise conditions. Participants will complete three study sessions across approximately three weeks. Study session 1 (T1) will consist of baseline assessments and pre-writing ratings, a future imaginal writing exercise, and then post-writing ratings. Study session 2 (T2) will occur approximately one week later and will consist of mid-study assessments and pre-writing ratings, a second, repeated future imaginal writing exercise, and then post-writing ratings. Finally, study session 3 (T3) will occur approximately one week later (approximately two weeks after T1) and will consist of follow-up assessments and repeated post-writing ratings.
NCT04785677
The investigators are conducting a randomized controlled trial to assess the impact of Resiliency in Stressful Experiences (RISE) - a comprehensive trauma-based program for young men releasing from a southeastern state's prisons. The investigators are assessing whether treating trauma and providing other transitional supports - such as employment assistance - as young men return home will help to improve their community stability and enhance their psychological well-being, in turn, resulting in less likelihood that a person will become incarcerated in the future.
NCT07456631
Social functioning, fundamental to adolescent's development and mental health, may be impaired by polarizing problematic social functioning, namely externalizing symptoms manifested by Oppositional Defiant Disorder and internalizing symptoms portrayed by Social Anxiety Disorder. Despite their high prevalence and similar associated impairments, interventions targeting these disorders are differently conceived. Alternatively, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) proposes that those apparently dissimilar social difficulties are rooted in similar processes. Though research has shown ACTs' efficacy in changing adults' internalizing and externalizing symptoms, studies on the potential of ACT in changing those problematics in adolescence are still scarce. This project proposes to conduct three clinical trials to test the efficacy and (dis)similarities of an transdiagnostic ACT intervention for changing internalizing and externalizing symptomatology in adolescents. It will amplify the transdiagnostic and evidence-based application of ACT to adolescents presenting polarizing disorders in the social functioning spectrum.
NCT07457801
The purpose of this study is to compare the effectiveness of two different online education courses (Oxford-Online and Mind-Online) for preventing stress related conditions among paramedics who have been working during a period of COVID-19 occurrence in Singapore. The study aims to: * Compare the efficacy of a locally-adapted version of internet-delivered cognitive training for resilience (Oxford Online) to an existing educational online training (Mind Online) on depressive symptom severity * Compare the efficacy of Oxford Online to Mind Online for improving posttraumatic stress symptoms, resilience, general psychological distress, anxiety symptoms, social support, work engagement, and health-related quality of life Participants will: * Complete an online battery of baseline questionnaires * Be randomised to receive 6 modules of either Oxford Online or Mind Online, delivered once per week over a 6-week period * Complete the same online questionnaire battery immediately following the intervention, and again at the 6-month and 12-month follow up
NCT07393945
This study investigates whether a structured, human-centered explanation about the use of artificial intelligence (AI)-supported real-time imaging systems can reduce preoperative anxiety and improve patients' sense of control before elective surgery. Advances in medical imaging and AI technologies have increased their visibility in clinical settings, including the perioperative period. However, limited information is available on how explanations about such technologies influence patients' psychological responses. In particular, uncertainty or misunderstanding about AI-supported systems may contribute to increased anxiety in some patients. In this randomized controlled trial, adult patients scheduled for elective surgery will be assigned to one of two groups. The control group will receive standard preoperative information routinely provided by the hospital. The intervention group will receive standard information plus a short, structured, and non-technical explanation about AI-supported real-time imaging systems, focusing on their role, limitations, and relevance to patient safety. Levels of preoperative anxiety and perceived control will be assessed before and after the information session using validated questionnaires. The study does not test or evaluate the technical performance of any AI system. Instead, it focuses on how communication and explanation about AI-supported technologies may influence patients' psychological preparedness for surgery. The findings may help inform human-centered and ethically responsible approaches to communicating about advanced technologies in perioperative care.
NCT07451925
Postoperative pain remains a significant clinical problem affecting recovery, mobilization, and patient satisfaction after surgery. Considerable interindividual variability exists in postoperative pain intensity even among patients undergoing the same surgical procedure. This variability may be influenced not only by the extent of surgical trauma but also by individual pain sensitivity and psychological factors such as preoperative anxiety. The aim of this prospective observational study is to evaluate whether pain intensity reported during routine venous cannulation and preoperative anxiety levels assessed by the Amsterdam Preoperative Anxiety and Information Scale (APAIS) can predict early postoperative pain severity in patients undergoing elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy under general anesthesia. Venous cannulation pain will be assessed using a 0-10 visual analog scale (VAS), and anxiety levels will be measured preoperatively using APAIS. Postoperative pain will be evaluated at predefined time points within the first 12 hours after surgery using VAS scores and analgesic consumption. Identifying simple and easily obtainable preoperative predictors may allow individualized postoperative analgesic strategies for patients at higher risk of severe postoperative pain.
NCT05967468
Anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorders are among the most common in children. Although cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is an effective and evidence-based treatment for such disorders, access to CBT is often limited. Family-based and internet-delivered therapy is one method to increase access to care. The purpose of this project is to evaluate the comparative efficacy and treatment mechanisms of two lower-intensity but effective treatments for families of children with anxiety or obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) via telehealth compared to an adapted Relaxation and Mentorship Training (RMT) intervention involving breathing exercises with a therapist.
NCT07449273
This randomized controlled trial aims to evaluate the effects of pranayama and pursed-lip breathing exercises on postoperative pain, anxiety, and vital signs in patients undergoing breast surgery. Postoperative pain and anxiety are common problems that can negatively affect recovery, physiological stability, and overall well-being. Non-pharmacological interventions such as breathing exercises may help reduce these adverse outcomes and support recovery. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of three groups: a pranayama breathing exercise group, a pursed-lip breathing exercise group, or a control group receiving routine postoperative care. Breathing exercises will be performed three times daily for five minutes. Outcomes including pain, anxiety, and vital signs will be measured at baseline (pretest), postoperative day 1, and postoperative day 2. The findings of this study are expected to provide evidence on the effectiveness of breathing exercises as supportive nursing interventions in the postoperative care of breast surgery patients.
NCT07444697
The goal of this observational study is to assess changes in patients' erectile function after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) using a standard IIEF (International Index of Erectile Function) questionnaire at 1, 3, and 6 months post-PCI. By doing this, we try to compare patients' responses to PCI after having a heart attack and stable angina to see the real effect of myocardial infarction on erectile function status in the long term by comparing it with a very similar group.