Can Rumination-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Reduce the Risk of Cardio-vascular Disease?

NAActive, not recruitingINTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment

9

Participants

Timeline

Start Date

August 15, 2023

Primary Completion Date

August 31, 2025

Study Completion Date

August 31, 2025

Conditions
RuminationDepressive SymptomsBlood Pressure
Interventions
BEHAVIORAL

Rumination-Focused Cognitive Behavior Therapy

The RFCBT exclusively addresses one possible mechanism underlying depression, rumination. In general, a participant and their therapist will identify when the participant ruminates in an unhelpful manner, what triggers the rumination, what function the rumination fulfills for the participant, and how the participant already does to stop ruminating. Building on this knowledge both together will change the environment to reduce the likelihood of the participant to ruminate, use consciously strategies to stop rumination when it occurs, and replace rumination by more helpful strategies. In the proposed single subject study, the participant and the therapist will meet in person or using a UofL approved video platform up to 18 times for 50-minutes.

Trial Locations (1)

40202

Have a Heart clinic, Louisville

All Listed Sponsors
lead

University of Louisville

OTHER

NCT05980130 - Can Rumination-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Reduce the Risk of Cardio-vascular Disease? | Biotech Hunter | Biotech Hunter