Clinical Trials Logo

Infant Obesity clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Infant Obesity.

Filter by:
  • None
  • Page 1

NCT ID: NCT06357299 Not yet recruiting - Pediatric Obesity Clinical Trials

Assessing Better Bottles for Babies

AB3
Start date: July 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will use a 2 x 2 factorial design to test impact of two intervention strategies (bottle size and bottle opacity) on infant weight gain.

NCT ID: NCT06117631 Recruiting - Metabolic Syndrome Clinical Trials

Project Sueño: Sleep & Understanding Early Nutrition in Obesity

Start date: July 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of the study is to understand how mothers think and feel about feeding their babies and putting them to sleep, understand more about programs that can support mothers taking care of babies, and how professionals can be most helpful in helping mothers make decisions about their baby's feeding and sleeping. The overarching goal is to prevent early life obesity and progression to metabolic syndrome in high-risk populations, starting with healthy toddler weights by age 2 years.

NCT ID: NCT05124847 Completed - Metabolic Syndrome Clinical Trials

TREating Pediatric Obesity

TREPO
Start date: September 27, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The main aim of the study is to collect preliminary information on the feasibility and efficacy of a time restricted eating intervention in Spanish children and adolescents with obesity and metabolic comorbidities. Two 8-week interventions will performed in a randomized crossover controlled design: a) reduction of the habitual eating window; b) standard care. Different measurements of body composition and cardiometabolic health markers will be performed along those weeks.

NCT ID: NCT04782063 Recruiting - Infant Obesity Clinical Trials

Prevention of Obesity in Infants of Overweight and Obese Women

Start date: January 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Maternal and childhood obesity have dramatically increased and continue to present a significant health problem. Studies show that offspring of overweight (body mass index, BMI >25-29.9) and obese (BMI ≥30) women are at increased risk of newborn and age 1-year adiposity, and infant adiposity predicts childhood and adult obesity. The investigators hypothesize that infants of overweight/obese (OW/OB) mothers have both relative hyperphagia and are provided human milk with increased caloric composition, leading to obesity. The investigators propose an intervention study to calibrate milk or formula intake in infants of OW/OB mothers so as to avoid overweight infants at 6 months of age.

NCT ID: NCT04502979 Completed - Parenting Clinical Trials

Learning to Love Mealtime Together

LiTTLe Me
Start date: September 26, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Infancy is an important target period for obesity prevention because once obese as an infant, the relative risk of remaining obese appears to rise with increasing age at great cost to both individuals and society. The ability to self-regulate energy intake (eating when hungry and stopping when full) is vital to obesity prevention and it is thought that this ability can be derailed by a chronic mismatch between parental feeding behavior and the infant's state (feeding in the absence of hunger and/or feeding beyond fullness). The study will test a novel intervention to help parents and pre-verbal infants better understand one another during feeding and it will offer new insight into how self-regulation of energy intake develops during infancy.

NCT ID: NCT04287764 Completed - Infant Obesity Clinical Trials

Infant Test-Retest of the Food Reinforcing Ratio Task

Start date: January 2, 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this study is to assess the test-retest reliability of an infant RRV paradigm which will allow researchers to study food reinforcement among infant of 9-18 months of age. By understanding the origins of food reinforcement, future interventions can be conducted to help overweight and obese population to alter their reinforcing values of food at a young age, perhaps during infancy.

NCT ID: NCT03334266 Completed - Obesity Clinical Trials

Preventing Early Childhood Obesity, Part 2: Family Spirit Nurture, Prenatal - 18 Months

Start date: September 25, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to assess the impact of a home-visiting program, called "Family Spirit Nurture" (FSN), on reducing early childhood obesity in American Indian (AI) children. The FSN intervention targets parent feeding practices, young children's diet and physical activity (PA) and early childhood (0-2 years of age) weight status, all associated with risk for early childhood obesity and, consequently, risk for obesity over the life course. The investigators will also explore whether maternal psychosocial factors (stress, depression and substance use), household food/water security and/or constrained physical activity environments moderate FSN intervention impacts on: mother's feeding behaviors for infants and toddlers; and, children's diets, PA patterns, and weight status. Finally, the investigators will examine how maternal/infant characteristics, diet and behaviors impact the underlying biologic mechanisms of early childhood obesity and whether social and behavioral interventions can impact infant metabolic health. The investigators evaluation will employ a randomized controlled design, in which both the intervention and comparison condition receive assisted transportation to prenatal and well-baby visits (called "Optimized Standard Care"), and the comparison condition also receives potentially beneficial injury prevention education at 8 assessment visits. Primary Aims: Efficacy of Family Spirit Nurture (FSN) + Optimized Standard Care (OSC) versus Injury Prevention Education (IPE) + OSC will be assessed for each of the following from birth to 24 months postpartum: Aim 1. Mothers' implementation of recommended feeding behaviors. Hypothesis 1. FSN + OSC mothers will be more likely to meet breastfeeding and complementary feeding recommendations and engage in responsive parenting/feeding behaviors compared to IPE + OSC mothers. Aim 2. Children's consumption of healthy diet and physical activity engagement. Hypothesis 2. FSN + OSC children will consume more fruits and vegetables and fewer calories from sugar sweetened beverages (SSB), snacks and desserts, and they will have higher physical activity and reduced screen time/other sedentary activities compared to IPE + OSC children. Aim 3. Children's weight status. Hypothesis 3. Mean BMI z-scores for FSN + OSC children will be closer to zero (the mean age- and sex- specific BMI z-score for the World Health Organization standard reference population) compared to IPE + OSC children.

NCT ID: NCT03101943 Completed - Obesity Clinical Trials

Preventing Early Childhood Obesity, Part 1: Family Spirit Nurture, 3-9 Months

Start date: March 29, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to assess the impact of a brief home-visiting module, called "Family Spirit Nurture" (FSN), on American Indian (AI) parent feeding practices associated with increased risk for early childhood obesity, with a primary focus on delaying introduction of infants' Sugar Sweetened Beverage (SSB) (including soda, energy drinks, juice with added sugar and other drinks with added sugar) intake while teaching mothers complementary feeding and responsive parenting practices. The investigators will also assess how water insecurity may moderate parents' feeding of SSBs to young children. Finally, the investigators will explore whether maternal knowledge of oral health practices and/or reduction of infants' SSB intake influences early indicators of infant's oral health (i.e., infants' oral microbiome and plaque formation). Our evaluation will employ a randomized controlled design, in which the control condition receives a beneficial home-safety educational model and assistance in safety proofing their homes for small children. Assessments in both groups will occur at baseline (between 6 and 10 weeks postpartum) and 4 months, 6 months, 9 months and 12 months postpartum. Primary Aims: Aim 1: To determine the effectiveness of the brief (6 lessons) FSN home-visiting parent feeding practice module on reducing SSB initiation and frequency among infants between 3 and 12 months of age. Hypothesis 1: Infants whose mothers receive FSN vs. controls will be less likely to introduce SSBs between 3 and 12 months of age. Aim 2: To determine the effectiveness of FSN to promote optimal complementary feeding and responsive parenting practices. Hypothesis 2: Mothers who receive FSN vs. controls will be more likely to practice recommended complementary feeding and responsive parenting practices between 3 and 12 months of age. Aim 3: To determine the impact of water insecurity on SSB consumption among infants between 3 and 6 months of age. Hypothesis 2: Parents who report water insecurity vs. those who do not will be more likely to give infants SSBs between 3 and 6 months of age. Secondary Aims: Secondary Aim 1: To explore if provision of water to families reduces SSB intake among mothers and infants ages 6 to 9 months of age. Secondary Aim 2: To explore if infants in the FSN intervention have better oral health outcomes than control infants up to 12 months postpartum.

NCT ID: NCT02244424 Completed - Infant Obesity Clinical Trials

Tools For Teen Moms: Reducing Infant Obesity Risk

TFTM
Start date: June 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this social media group randomized trial (GRT) is to test the feasibility of our Baby Dayr for Teen Moms intervention to increase maternal responsiveness to infant cues and implement healthy feeding practices through development of a healthy feeding style. Aim 1: Evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of the Baby Dayr intervention administered to the target population as it relates to their acceptance and satisfaction with the content, format, delivery, and use of social media. Aim 2: Explore efficacy of the Baby Dayr intervention administered to adolescent mothers of infants 4 months of age or less as assessed by maternal responsiveness, feeding style, and feeding practices evaluated at the completion of the intervention using self-report methods.