View clinical trials related to Overweight.
Filter by:The aim of this study is to evaluate whether supplementation with resistant starch improves biomarkers associated with antioxidant status and insulin resistance in subjects with overweight and obesity.
APD356-A001-402 is a multicenter, double-blind, randomized, parallel-group pilot study of 12-week duration in overweight and obese adults. Approximately 225 subjects will be randomized to one of three treatment arms in a ratio 1:1:1 and will receive the combinations of lorcaserin 10 mg twice daily (BID) plus immediate-release phentermine-HCl 15 mg BID or 15 mg once daily (QD), or lorcaserin alone.
This project will compare the preliminary efficacy of a novel school-delivered intervention, mindfulness plus health education intervention, to health education alone on dietary and physical activity habits in adolescents. This study has important public health implications because of the negative consequences of unhealthy diets and lack of exercise on health, such as obesity, cardiovascular disease and diabetes. If effective, this intervention has high potential for translation to high school settings
The aim of the present study is to investigate the changes in body composition and the degree of compensation to exercise induced energy expenditure after 1 year of physical activity with either moderate or vigorous intensity in overweight and class 1 obese men and women. The present study is a sub study to main study "Active Commuting To Improve Well-being and Health in Everyday Life" (NCT 01962259)
The purpose of this study is to examine the feasibility and acceptability of a family-based program to improve physical activity and tobacco outcomes in a small pilot of middle school students and their families.
The main goal of this project is to develop, implement and evaluate the 5As Team intervention (5AsT)for healthcare practitioners to improve their weight management patient encounters and improve patient health outcomes. The 5As of Obesity Management suite of tools is a robust, evidence-based approach to weight management, however its implementation and uptake has been heterogeneous in primary care. This project was co-created by, and will be implemented with, our partners the Southside Primary Care Network (SSPCN). A needs assessment on weight management by the SSPCN revealed the need to change provider practice to increase the number of weight management visits. Despite a robust didactic training session on weight management for all providers, which includes the 5As, the uptake in practice has been highly heterogeneous. Thus, the 5AsT intervention to address the implementation of the 5As of Obesity Management in clinical practice was developed by the collaborative team. The SSPCN consists of 25 autonomous groups of multidisciplinary professionals that provide service to a defined group of patients within the SSPCN. The 5As Team consists of multidisciplinary providers (Registered Nurse/ Nurse Practitioner, dietician, mental health worker) who work collaboratively. The intervention is a learning collaborative where these 12 different 5AsTs get together to work to address facilitators and barriers to weight management in their settings over a 6 month period. Half of the teams (N=12) will remain as controls and deliver usual care. They serve as a comparison group for the 5AsTs. This mixed methods study's primary outcomes will assess the change in provider practice and the effectiveness of the intervention and implementation. To assess the impact of 5AsT on patients, we will recruit patients presenting to the central SSPCN programming, We will not intervene directly on patients; we will observe the impact of the 5AsT and SSPCN programming on their health outcomes for a minimum of 6 months, and where possible for 18 months. Data collected includes demographics, weight (BMI), waist circumference, vital signs,and Short Form-12 (SF-12,these measures are routinely measured in the SSPCN), EuroQol-5 dimensions 5 Level (EQ-5D-5L), modified patient assessment of chronic illness (PACIC), and observed adherence to routine clinical care for guideline recommended laboratory monitoring (cholesterol panel, fasting glucose, HbA1c, where appropriate).
The purpose of Intermittent Fasting study is to investigate whether intermittent fasting could decrease the chronic inflammation levels in overweight/obese people.
The aim of present randomized controlled trial is to evaluate the health effects of physical activity in transport and leisure time domains of everyday life and to develop durable physical activity regimens, i.e. to go from lifestyle intervention to daily lifestyle routine, in overweight individuals. Subjects will be randomized to 1 of 4 groups. 1: Vigorous intensity leisure time physical activity, 2: Moderate intensity leisure time activity, 3: Active commuting by bicycle, or 4: a non-intervention control group
Dietary manipulation is proving to be an effective lifestyle strategy to combat the obesity epidemic. Increased dietary protein is one effective strategy. For example, increased whey protein ingestion with and without exercise training is associated with enhanced weight loss, body composition and subjective hunger in overweight and obese individuals. Our findings suggest that the effects of whey protein ingestion occur independent of a calorie-restricted diet and to a greater extent in individuals following a combined exercise program of resistance exercise, sprint intervals, stretching/yoga/pilates, and aerobic exercise training compared to standard resistance training.
A randomized controlled trial comparing the effects of the social-enabled internet weight loss and diet change intervention with the delayed treatment group for 3 months. We will study the effect of adding social interactions and supports to an Internet weight loss and diet change intervention. The website intervention will have action planning with social interactions and support features for sharing, reusing, recommending, and discussing strategies for improving habits. We hypothesize that the intervention group with access to the website will lose more weight than the delayed treatment group after three months.