Application and Evaluation of Group Cognitive Intervention for Depressed Adolescents
Sponsor: Department of Health
This EARLY_PHASE1 trial investigates Community Adolescents at Risk for Depression and Suicide and is currently completed. Department of Health leads this study, which shows 6 recorded versions since 2006 — indicating limited longitudinal coverage. This study adds to the longitudinal dataset for psychiatric treatment development.
Study Description(click to expand)Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is well known for its active, directive, time-limited, and structured approach. Despite an increasing prevalence of adolescent depression in Taiwan, few studies have been conducted to evaluate the immediate and long-term effectiveness of CBT for community-based adolescents at risk for depression and suicide. Also, little is known about the effectiveness of the involvement of parents in CBT groups. The Adolescent Coping with Depression Course (CWDA) (19) is an effective CBT-oriented group intervention for adolescent depression. However, it has not been tested in specific cultural groups. The primary purpose of this study was therefore to compare the immediate and long-term effectiveness of CBT alone, CBT with parental education, and control groups for community-based adolescents at risk for depression and suicide.A quasi-experimental research design was used in this study. Community-based high school students at risk for depression and suicide were recruited and assigned to one of two experimental groups or a control group. Students in the experimental groups received CBT plus parental education (group A, n = 9) or CBT alone (group B, n = 10). The control group was designed as a waiting list group (group C, n = 12). Both experimental groups received a follow-up session...
Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is well known for its active, directive, time-limited, and structured approach. Despite an increasing prevalence of adolescent depression in Taiwan, few studies have been conducted to evaluate the immediate and long-term effectiveness of CBT for community-based adolescents at risk for depression and suicide. Also, little is known about the effectiveness of the involvement of parents in CBT groups. The Adolescent Coping with Depression Course (CWDA) (19) is an effective CBT-oriented group intervention for adolescent depression. However, it has not been tested in specific cultural groups. The primary purpose of this study was therefore to compare the immediate and long-term effectiveness of CBT alone, CBT with parental education, and control groups for community-based adolescents at risk for depression and suicide.A quasi-experimental research design was used in this study. Community-based high school students at risk for depression and suicide were recruited and assigned to one of two experimental groups or a control group. Students in the experimental groups received CBT plus parental education (group A, n = 9) or CBT alone (group B, n = 10). The control group was designed as a waiting list group (group C, n = 12). Both experimental groups received a follow-up session 1 year after the intervention. Several outcome variables (depressive symptoms, suicidal ideation, cognitive triad, learned resourcefulness \[LR\], and salivary cortisol level) were used to determine the effectiveness of treatment.
Status Flow
Change History
6 versions recorded-
Jan 2026 — Present [monthly]
Completed EARLY_PHASE1
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Sep 2024 — Present [monthly]
Completed EARLY_PHASE1
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Jul 2024 — Sep 2024 [monthly]
Completed EARLY_PHASE1
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Jan 2021 — Jul 2024 [monthly]
Completed EARLY_PHASE1
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Feb 2017 — Jan 2021 [monthly]
Completed EARLY_PHASE1
Phase: Phase 0 → EARLY_PHASE1
▶ Show 1 earlier version
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Jan 2017 — Feb 2017 [monthly]
Completed Phase 0
First recorded
Jan 2006
Trial started
Per CT.gov start date — pre-dates our first snapshot
Eligibility Summary
No eligibility information available.
Contact Information
- Department of Health
- Taipei Medical University Hospital
For direct contact, visit the study record on ClinicalTrials.gov .