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This study is completed. It focuses on depression and currently lists study information in the United States.
This study may no longer be open, but we can help you understand it and find similar studies.
This study is testing whether the study approach may be useful for adults experiencing depression.
Participants may complete study activities around the study approach, complete questionnaires or follow-up assessments, attend study visits with the research team. The registry lists locations in the United States.
This study appears to be mainly for adults with depression.
Ask about whether there is a comparison group, how many visits or travel steps are needed, the exact eligibility criteria.
The official record suggests a mix of remote and in-person participation through a university, with sites including University of Illinois at Chicago. Participation appears to center on questionnaires, assessments, or follow-up information rather than a study treatment. The main fit is usually matching the main diagnosis and having access to the required digital tools, while common reasons not to take part include safety concerns that need urgent care first and major medical issues that could make participation unsuitable. The official record does not list a trial phase, which usually means the study is focused on observation rather than testing a staged treatment.
This study may no longer be open, but we can help you understand it and find similar studies.
Taking part may help improve understanding of your condition.
It requires regular visits and structured follow-up.
Mixes in-person and remote participation.
Information from public sources. Are you the study sponsor? Contact us to update this page: hi@hopestage.com
This study is exploring digital app or tool for people with depression. Participants may complete study visits, assessments, or follow-up activities defined by the research team. Direct benefit is not guaranteed. The detailed objective is not always clearly listed in the public registry; the study team can confirm.
The study type is not clearly categorized in the public registry. Focus on the objective, required tasks, visits, any intervention, and eligibility criteria, then ask the study team to confirm.
This study may concern people with depression; age range: From 25 Years to 50 Years. The criteria appear fairly specific, but you should not assume you are eligible. The study team must confirm diagnosis, age, exclusions, available locations, and next steps.
The public registry does not clearly describe all participation steps. The listed study locations suggest that at least part of participation may involve a physical site. Ask whether some steps can be done remotely.
The public registry does not make the main risk category clear. Ask the study team what activities are required, what could feel uncomfortable, how safety is monitored, and what happens if you want to stop. For any mental health study, also ask who to contact if you feel worse, whether participation may affect current treatment, whether you can stop, and who confirms eligibility.
The listed study locations suggest that at least part of participation may involve a physical site. Ask which sites are open, how many visits are expected, whether any steps can be done remotely, and whether travel costs or compensation are listed.
This study is sponsored by University of Illinois at Chicago, which appears to be a university. The listed contact or investigator is University of Illinois at Chicago, affiliated with University of Illinois at Chicago. If available, it can be useful to check the sponsor website, collaborators, investigator affiliation, and the official registry before deciding. HopeStage does not judge the quality of a sponsor or researcher, but helps you identify what to verify.
The registry indicates that this study is completed. It may still be useful for understanding the research, but you are unlikely to be able to join.
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