Current public records in HopeStage Research for this page.
Mental health clinical trials in Switzerland
Explore public mental health clinical trials and research studies listing Swiss sites or participation information. HopeStage helps people understand registry records before contacting a research team.
Marked as recruiting in the source study data.
Each study page links back to the official registry record.
Counts and examples come from the HopeStage Research dataset available at page generation time.
What this page covers
- Location
- Switzerland
- What may be available
- Public mental health studies listing this country or related participation information.
- Who it may be relevant for
- People looking for mental health research opportunities in this location.
- What to check before applying
- Recruitment status, location, age range, study type, sponsor, eligibility criteria, and the official registry record.
- Source information
- HopeStage uses public registry data and links each study page back to the official source where available.
Free, transparent, and built from lived experience
- HopeStage is built by people with lived experience and has been active for several years in mental health education, advocacy, and community support.
- This page uses official public registry records and keeps source links visible so you can verify the information yourself.
- HopeStage keeps patient resources free by also working with mental health organizations, research teams, startups, biotech companies, and clinical trial teams to improve patient trust and solution design.
Common location searches
People often search by condition and country first. These phrases help connect the page to practical searches like studies near me, studies in France, or studies in Australia.
Start broad, then verify at the source
Use the platform to compare Swiss studies by condition, recruitment status, sponsor, registry, study type, and keyword.
- Open a study page to read the plain-English summary.
- Check country, recruitment status, sponsor, study type, and age range.
- Use the official registry link before contacting a research team.
- Discuss fit with your care team when the study may be relevant.
Ways people search for this topic
HopeStage uses public sources and patient-friendly summaries. It does not decide eligibility and does not promise medical benefit.
How to check whether a study may fit
- Read the official inclusion and exclusion criteria, not only the short summary.
- Check location, age range, visit schedule, time commitment, and whether remote participation is mentioned.
- Confirm recruitment status on the official registry because public records can change.
- Ask the research team to confirm eligibility before making any decision.
Questions to ask before joining
- What is the study trying to learn?
- How many visits, calls, assessments, or samples are expected?
- What are the possible risks, discomforts, or reasons I may need to stop?
- Who can I contact if my symptoms change during the study?
- How will my health information be stored and protected?
Official sources, rewritten for clarity
- HopeStage uses public clinical trial registry records, including ClinicalTrials.gov and other official registries when available.
- Study pages keep source links visible so users can verify the original record.
- Counts are generated from the current HopeStage Research dataset and may differ from live registry totals.
- Plain-language summaries simplify registry information without deciding eligibility or recommending treatment.
Examples of currently recruiting studies
KarXT for Schizophrenia
This study is recruiting in the United States, in Canada, in the United Kingdom, .... It is testing KarXT for Schizophrenia.
Activating Social Resources in Psychotherapy-Seeking Individuals: Effectiveness and Timing of a Social Support Just-in-Time Adaptive Intervention
This study is recruiting. It focuses on depression and currently lists participation information in Switzerland.
Antidepressant Response of DMT Masked With Propofol
This study is recruiting. It focuses on depression and currently lists participation information in Switzerland.
Benefits of ADHD Treatment in Detained People
This study is recruiting. It focuses on ADHD and currently lists participation information in Switzerland.
Brain Circuitry Therapeutics for Schizophrenia
This study is recruiting. It focuses on schizophrenia and currently lists participation information in Switzerland.
Clonidine to Prevent Delirium After Electroconvulsive Therapy.
This study is recruiting. It focuses on depression and currently lists participation information in Switzerland.
Explore more mental health research pages
Questions about mental health clinical trials in switzerland
What can I find on this Switzerland page?
This page lists public mental health studies in Switzerland available in HopeStage Research, with plain-language summaries and official source links.
How many matching studies are listed?
HopeStage currently lists 100 matching studies on this topic, including 36 marked as recruiting in the source data.
Does a recruiting status mean I can join?
No. Recruiting status means the public record is marked as recruiting. The research team decides eligibility, and details should be checked in the official registry and with your care team.
Is this medical advice?
No. HopeStage Research is not medical advice. It is a clearer starting point for public study information, source verification, and better questions.
Is this page free for patients?
Yes. HopeStage Research is free for patients and people looking for support. HopeStage funds free resources partly by working transparently with mental health organizations and research teams.
Where does the information come from?
The information comes from official public clinical trial registry records when available. HopeStage explains it in clearer language and keeps original source links available for verification.
Not medical advice
HopeStage Research uses public study information and links to official registry records. It does not provide medical advice, determine eligibility, diagnose, recommend treatment, guarantee access, or promise benefit. Always verify details with the official registry, the research team, and your care team.

