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RecruitingNCT06555406

Healthy Lifestyles in Bipolarity: Bay Area Study

This recruiting study focuses on bipolarity and currently lists sites or participation links in United States.

BipolarityOtherFrom 18 Years to 65 Years
In plain English

Key information made simple

This study exists to understand what helps a digital app or remote support tool work in everyday practice, not just under ideal conditions. Researchers are trying to understand whether a digital app or remote support tool can improve sleep, daily rhythms, and longer-term stability. For people living with Bipolarity, the gap between what sounds good on paper and what works in daily life is often important. If the findings are useful, they could help future care become more targeted, practical, and easier to trust. Taking part helps build the evidence that can improve understanding and care for others over time.

What to expect

Your next step

The official record suggests in-person participation through a university, with sites including University of California Berkeley in Berkeley. Participation appears to involve using a digital tool or support program and giving feedback through check-ins or assessments. The main fit is usually matching the main diagnosis and being able to understand the study and consent. The official record does not list a formal phase, which usually means this is focused more on feasibility, delivery, or support than a standard drug-development stage.

Official source

Registry reference

This page links back to the public source record so people can verify details directly with the registry and research team.

If you want the full study description, eligibility criteria, locations, and sponsor information in the original format, this is the place to check before taking the next step.

Open source record
Interested?

Check my eligibility

Study reference: NCT06555406. Your email is the only field you need to provide here.
In practice

For you

Taking part may help test a support approach in real life.

It requires regular follow-up, often through questionnaires or interviews.

Requires travel, with in-person participation in United States.

Important

Not medical advice

Information from public sources. Are you the study sponsor? Contact us to update this page: hi@hopestage.com