View clinical trials related to Health Promotion.
Filter by:AHAA is a healthy lifestyle program offered to older adults aged 60+ years. The program is developed based upon co-creation with the target group and implemented and evaluated in several locations.
The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of an 8-week high-intensity interval training (HIIT) or HIIT plus resistance training program combined with post-exercise protein supplementation on cardiorespiratory fitness and cardiometabolic risk indices in previously untrained individuals.
The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of an extremely time-efficient high-intensity interval training program, performed over a period of six months in a real-world (workplace) setting, on cardiorespiratory fitness, cardiometabolic risk profile, and self-reported outcomes including perceived stress and subjective work ability in previously sedentary employees.
While healthy lifestyle behaviors have been identified as instrumental to preventing chronic disease, programs to successfully promote healthy behavior adoption in underserved communities have had limited sustainable success. SHE Tribe is a culturally tailored, social network intervention created through CBPR to overcome previously identified barriers and improve health behavior among women in underserved communities.
The present study will carry out a workplace health promotion via MBI with lessons of dietary behavior to help overweight or obese workers to loss weight.
The potential health gains from healthy lifestyles are very well-known, what is still not known is how to help people to adopt these lifestyles, by means of brief interventions feasible in routine general practice. This study was designed to explore the feasibility and efficacy of innovative implementation strategies for the promotion physical activity, diet and smoking abstinence in primary care. The investigators hypothesize that collegiate planning between practitioners, researchers and managers, with a socio-ecological perspective and taking into account the real context of collaborating centers, will guarantee the sustainability and effectiveness of these programs.