Medical Information Only. Consult your healthcare provider before considering clinical trial enrollment.
Mental Health Wellness
Open-data reference.
9 US clinical trials · 4 currently recruiting
Active & Recent Trials
Food-Body-Mind Intervention (16 Weeks)
Michigan State University
NCT06597474
Harlem Strong Mental Health Coalition
City University of New York, School of Public Health
NCT05833555
Health Without Barriers/Salud Sin Barreras
Colorado State University
NCT06052943
Pilot Testing of a Structural Racism Intervention for Immigrant Latinx Families
University of Illinois at Chicago
NCT05991739
Wellbeing of the ECE Workforce in Low-resourced Locations
Colorado School of Public Health
NCT05416216
The IGNITE for Kids Study on Concentrated Investment in Black Neighborhoods and Child Health and Well-Being
University of Pennsylvania
NCT05760001
Brief Online Intervention for Veterans
RAND
NCT04244461
Testing a Wellness App for First Responders, Military Personnel and Veterans
University of Pennsylvania
NCT06336967
Va Meh Du Intervention
Wake Forest University Health Sciences
NCT06394193
Phase Distribution
| Phase | Trial count |
|---|---|
| Phase 2 | 1 |
Top Sponsors
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov, National Library of Medicine. Data is informational only.
Reading the Mental Health Wellness Trial Landscape
ClinicalTrials.gov lists 9 US studies indexed under Mental Health Wellness, and 4 of those are currently open to recruitment — roughly 44% of the total volume on the registry. That ratio is a useful proxy for activity level: a high share of recruiting studies often signals that research interest is current and that new enrollment opportunities are appearing, while a low share typically means the field is dominated by completed or follow-up work where most participant spots have already been filled. These counts reflect the public registry only and include studies at every stage of design, so they should be read as an index of research attention rather than as a measure of treatment availability.
The phase distribution for Mental Health Wellness shows 0 late-stage studies (Phase 3 and Phase 4 combined) alongside 1 earlier-phase entries (Phase 1 through Phase 2). Phase 1 and Phase 2 studies focus on early safety signals, dosing, and preliminary effect, while Phase 3 studies are typically the larger efficacy and safety trials submitted toward regulatory review, and Phase 4 studies follow approved interventions in real-world use. A condition weighted toward later phases often reflects a mature research pipeline with several interventions already close to or past approval, whereas a heavier early-phase tilt suggests the field is still exploring new mechanisms and candidate approaches.
Top sponsor activity for Mental Health Wellness is led by University of Pennsylvania with 2 indexed trials, alongside 7 other organizations in the top contributor list. The list on this page surfaces up to 9 of the most relevant recent and active entries, ordered with recruiting studies first so practical options are visible. All figures are derived from the public ClinicalTrials.gov dataset maintained by the National Library of Medicine and are reproduced here for reference. Inclusion of a trial, sponsor, or intervention on this page is neither an endorsement nor a recommendation — eligibility, protocol changes, and site-level status can shift frequently, so always verify current details on ClinicalTrials.gov and consult a qualified healthcare provider before acting on anything you see here.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many clinical trials are there for Mental Health Wellness?
PlainTrial tracks 9 US clinical trials for Mental Health Wellness, of which 4 are currently recruiting participants. Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov.
How do I find a recruiting trial for Mental Health Wellness?
Use the trial list above filtered by "Recruiting" status, or visit our trial finder at /recruiting to search by condition and state. Always discuss trial participation with your healthcare provider before enrolling.
Is this data current?
Data is sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov and reflects our most recent data pull. Trial status may have changed since then. Always verify current information at ClinicalTrials.gov before making decisions about participation.
Related
Disclaimer: This information is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional advice. Data is sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (National Library of Medicine). Consult a qualified professional before making decisions based on this data.
Read our methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov (NIH/NLM) ClinicalTrials.gov AACT registry · 2024 Trial counts and statuses sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov. Sponsor counts include both industry and federal/academic sponsors.