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Pregnancy Weight Gain clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Pregnancy Weight Gain.

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NCT ID: NCT06226597 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Overweight and Obesity

Fitbit Device Use in Overweight Pregnancy

Start date: February 8, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

There are set guidelines for weight gain developed by the Institute of Medicine in pregnancy but about three quarters of women gain an inappropriate weight during pregnancy. Many studies have assessed ways to decrease weight gain in these women who gain excess weight, usually through a combination of diet and exercise. Still, often these interventions are difficult to implement, expensive, or have low acceptability. Wearable Fitbit devices have been on the market for years and slowly becoming more inexpensive and easier to use. Previous studies on non-pregnant women have shown that using the device can help reduce weight gain. In addition, small studies in pregnant women have shown they are accurate for measuring steps and have high acceptability and retention rates. The ability of the Fitbit to assess metrics of sleep including sleep duration and quality will also be assessed. This project aims to provide overweight and obese pregnant women at the beginning of their pregnancy with the Fitbit device and with regular follow-up to assess if there is effectiveness in increasing the rate of women who meet weight gain guidelines compared to women without the device along with measuring aspects of sleep.

NCT ID: NCT06129461 Not yet recruiting - Eating Disorders Clinical Trials

A Single Session Self-guided Acceptance-based Digital Intervention Targeting Food Cravings in Pregnancy

Start date: November 15, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Pregnancy is a time of heightened risk for disordered eating behaviors, which have been linked to adverse health outcomes in gestation, delivery, and the postpartum. These adverse outcomes may at least in part be mediated by greater risk of deviation from recommended gestational weight gain trajectories, especially in those engaged in binge and loss of control eating. This study will explore the efficacy of a single-session, self-guided online acceptance-based intervention targeting food cravings as powerful and modifiable predictors of binge and LOC eating in pregnancy.

NCT ID: NCT05712629 Completed - Birth Weight Clinical Trials

The Effect of Functional Bread Dadih on Microbiota Profile of Weight Increase Pregnant Women and Infant Birth Weight

Start date: April 12, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aims of study to determine the effect of giving functional bread and dadih's vla on weight gain of pregnant women and birth weight of babies.

NCT ID: NCT05619705 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Overweight and Obesity

Healthy for Two-Home Visiting (H42-HV): Health Coaching for Pregnant Women

Start date: April 25, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to compare the effectiveness of H42-HV integrated into home visiting compared with usual home visiting services in reducing postpartum weight retention (difference between pre-pregnancy weight and weight at 6 months postpartum) among pregnant and postpartum people. The intervention is tailored for Black and Latinx pregnant and postpartum people and, ultimately, aims to address inequities in cardiometabolic health.

NCT ID: NCT04724330 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Overweight and Obesity

Pragmatic Randomized Clinical Trial to Limit Weight Gain in Pregnancy and Prevent Obesity

H42/H4U
Start date: March 15, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Healthy for Two, Healthy for You (H42/H4U) is an innovative evidence-based pregnancy/postpartum health coach intervention that is remotely-delivered (phone coaching using motivational interviewing, web-based platform, mobile phone behavioral tracking). The aim of this randomized controlled trial (RCT) is to embed H42/H4U into Johns Hopkins prenatal care clinics that serve a racially and economically diverse population, leveraging existing staff as trained health coaches to test its effectiveness and implementation. The investigators hypothesize that women in the H42/H4U arm will have lower gestational weight gain and lower rates of gestational diabetes, without an increase in low birth weight infants, and that implementation into the investigators' prenatal care clinics will be feasible and scalable.