Skip to main content
Clinical Trials/NL-OMON21982
NL-OMON21982
Completed
N/A

A randomised controlled trial into the effectiveness of auditory training in children with (central) auditory processing disorders.

MC Utrecht0 sites108 target enrollmentTBD

Overview

Phase
N/A
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
auditieve verwerkingsproblemen - auditory processing disorders
Sponsor
MC Utrecht
Enrollment
108
Status
Completed
Last Updated
2 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

/A

Registry
who.int
Start Date
TBD
End Date
TBD
Last Updated
2 years ago
Study Type
Interventional

Investigators

Sponsor
MC Utrecht

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • 1\. Children aged between 5\-6 and 9\-11 years;
  • 2\. Normal peripheral hearing acuity;

Exclusion Criteria

  • 1\. Below normal intelligence (IQ \< 85\);
  • 2\. Language comprehension and/or language production disorder;

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Not specified

Similar Trials

Recruiting
N/A
A controlled study examining CBT for bereaved children.The death of a loved one in childhood and adolescence is a risk factor for distress and dysfunction. This event has been associated with increased emotional problems including elevated depression, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress, as well as somatic complaints and behavioural problems (Dowdney, 2008Kaplow, Layne, & Pynoos, 2012). An estimated 5% to 10% of children, experience clinically significant psychiatric problems following loss, including major depression, posttraumatic stress-disorder (PTSD), and Prolonged Grief Disorder (PGD) (Melhem, Moritz, Walker, Shear, & Brent, 2007Melhem, Porta, Shamseddeen, Walker, & Brent, 2011).PGD encompasses several symptoms including separation distress, preoccupation with thoughts about the lost person, a sense of purposelessness about the future, numbness, bitterness, difficulties accepting the loss and difficulty moving on with life without the lost person (Prigerson et al., 2009Shear et al., 2011). Although PGD has mostly been studied among adults, a growing body of empirical studies has shown that children and adolescents can develop PGD symptoms, that can be reliably assessed, are distinct from normal grief, depression and anxiety, including PTSD, and are predictive of significant concomitant internalizing and externalizing problems (Brown & Goodman, 2005Dillen, Fontaine, & Verhofstadt-Denève, 2008Spuij, Prinzie et al., 2012Spuij, Reitz et al., 2012). Evidence that, in a small percentage of people, acute grief reactions turn into chronic debilitating distress, blocking reestablishment of normal routines, will likely lead to the inclusion of two bereavement-related disorders in the DSM-5, namely Adjustment Disorder Related to Bereavement, located in its main text, and Persistent Complex Bereavement-Related Disorder, located in its appendix (APA, 2000APA, 2012for discussions see Boelen & Prigerson, 2012Kaplow et al., 2012Wakefield, 2012).
NL-OMON25798niversiteit UtrechtFaculteit Sociale WetenschappenDepartement Kinder- en JeugdstudiesPostbus 801403508 TC UTRECHTNederland160
Not Yet Recruiting
N/A
Effectiveness of Running Therapy on Depression.Depression
NL-OMON20278Symfora groep220
Not Yet Recruiting
N/A
A randomized controlled trial for the efficacy Observation of Acupuncture Combined with Fixed-Point Bone-Setting Manipulation in the Treatment of Lumbar Disc HerniatioDH
ITMCTR2000004100The Third Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University
Not Yet Recruiting
N/A
A randomized controlled trial to test the effectiveness of an immersive 3D video game in preventing anxiety.Anxiety, Prevention, Adolescents, Biofeedback
NL-OMON27625Radboud University Nijmegen, Behavioural Science Institute120
Recruiting
N/A
Randomised controlled trial to evaluate the effects of tele-monitoring weight in oncology and COPD patients.OncologyCOPD MalnutritionWeightInfectionsComplications
NL-OMON24869Medizorg BVNutricia NetherlandsAbbott NutritionMedizorgLoodsboot 73991 CJ HoutenTel. +31 30 2804271 Nutricia NetherlandsAlbert Einsteinlaan 202719 EP Zoetermeer+31 79 3539000 Abbott NutritionWegalaan 92132 JD Hoofddorp+31 88 8222487168