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UnknownNCT04069182

Behavioral Activation Therapy for Medical Students With Symptoms of Depression in Two Cities of Mexico

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
40 (estimated)
Sponsor
Universidad Autonoma de Baja California · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 60 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

This study evaluates the effectiveness of The Behavioral Activation Protocol, a psychological treatment for the intervention of mild to moderate depression. It is compared the effectiveness of the treatment with the changes of the same participants before and after the treatment. The changes are being assessed through subjective measures such as psychometrics and objective measures such as electroencephalography.

Detailed description

Depression is currently one of the mental health disorders that have gained relevance globally due to its constant increase in recent years. In Mexico, it is the disease that occupies the fourth position of diseases that cause disability. This disorder manifests as symptoms of physical pain when it is at high levels, resulting in a decrease in the quality of life. Other symptoms are; changes in eating, sleeping habits, and also presents comorbidity with anxiety disorders. In some cases, is presented suicidal ideation and behavior. University students belong to the vulnerable age group, among them it has been shown that it is medical students who have symptoms of depression and are 2.45 times more likely to commit suicide compared to the general population. Medical students are a population at risk taking the characteristics of mental disorders such as depression, which can lead to abandoning studies, makes it difficult to work efficiently, and is present the deterioration of social relationships. In the statistics on the death of doctors, between 300 and 400 doctors commit suicide each year in the United States alone (2018). In contrast, in Mexico there is no reported suicide statistics in doctors, however the data shows that the phenomenon of suicide has increased in recent years in the general population. The patients will be treated through Behavioral Activation Therapy. Through some studies, the efficacy of the Behavioral Activation Therapy has been confirmed compared to exclusively cognitive cutting therapy. Other studies have corroborated the effectiveness of Behavioral Activation Therapy through a meta-analysis comparing this model with waiting list groups, placebo, conventional treatment and has even obtained better results with drugs treating cases of severe depression. This study will have only one intervention group, without a control group or waiting list. The patients will be submitted to pre and post treatment. The subjective measures will be: 1. -The Center for Epidemiologic Studies - Depression (CES-D) scale. 2. \- The Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale - 21 Items (DASS-21). 3. \- Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index. 4. \- The Plutchik Suicide Risk Scale Also it is planned to measure the brain activity of the patients through an electroencephalogram, specifically the alpha and beta rhythms. To perform this measure, it will be used the EMOTIVE EPOC + of 14 channels is non-invasive, painless, low cost method Used for scientific research. The 14 channels with which the device counts. It allows to measure the cerebral areas AF3, F7, F3, FC5, T7, P7, O1, O2, P8, T8, FC6, F4, F8, AF4, based on the international system 10-20. The intervention will be implemented in two cities in two public universities. Autonomous University of Baja California at the Faculty of Medicine and Psychology and the Autonomous University of Juarez at the Institute of Biomedical Sciences.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALBehavioral Activation TherapyBehavioral Activation Therapy (BAT) has its origins in Cognitive Behavioral Therapy. In BAT, the patient monitors his emotions and daily activities, as a behavioral element. It seeks to increase the number of pleasant activities and increase interactions with the environment. The BAT considers positive reinforcement as the main intervention strategy. The treatment focuses on helping patients to systematically increase contact with their life's reward sources and solve their problems through procedures that focus on activation and on processes that inhibit it such as escape, avoidance behaviors and ruminant thoughts. It is a brief treatment consisting of 10 to 12 sessions spaced weekly (one hour per session), the first sessions are an explanation of the treatment and depression. Subsequent sessions are based on a collaborative work where the therapist and the patient work together to find activities that are according to the needs of the patient.

Timeline

Start date
2019-08-01
Primary completion
2020-06-01
Completion
2020-07-01
First posted
2019-08-28
Last updated
2019-08-28

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: Mexico

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04069182. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.