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This study is recruiting. It focuses on depression and currently lists participation information in Japan.
Leave your email and HopeStage can help you better understand this study.
This study is looking at whether Neurofeedback can help people with Depression. Participants take part in Neurofeedback and complete follow-up assessments. Taking part may give some people access to Neurofeedback, but direct benefit is not guaranteed.
The official record suggests in-person participation through a clinic, with sites including UNB Sumiyoshi Jinja Mae Clinic in Fukuoka. Participation appears to involve assessments along with scans or samples to help researchers understand patterns more clearly. The main fit is usually matching the main diagnosis and being able to follow the planned visits or tasks, while common reasons not to take part include safety concerns that need urgent care first. This is an early-stage study, which usually means a smaller group and a focus on learning how the approach behaves.
This study may matter because it adds public evidence around depression. HopeStage presents it as a starting point for understanding the study, checking the official source, and preparing questions with a care team.
Taking part may help test a support approach in real life.
It requires regular visits and structured follow-up.
Requires travel, with in-person participation in Japan.
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.
Information from public sources. Are you the study sponsor? Contact us to update this page: hi@hopestage.com
This study is exploring psychotherapy or therapy for people with depression. Participants may complete study visits, assessments, or follow-up activities defined by the research team. Direct benefit is not guaranteed.
This study is sponsored by UNB Sumiyoshi Jinja Mae Clinic. Based on the sponsor name or official registry information, it appears to be a hospital or academic medical center. You should verify the details in the official registry record.
This study may involve psychotherapy or therapy, study visits, and assessments. The time commitment is multiple visits or assessments. The study phase is not available in HopeStage data. Check the official source record to see whether a phase is listed. Enrollment is not available in HopeStage data. HopeStage cannot say whether a study is safe or right for you. Before joining, ask the research team about possible risks, time commitment, visits, side effects, compensation, safety monitoring, and whether participation may affect your current care.
Use the official source record linked on this page to check the full study description, recruitment status, eligibility criteria, locations, sponsor information, phase, enrollment, contact details, and any listed risks or requirements.
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