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Overweight or Obesity clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Overweight or Obesity.

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NCT ID: NCT05144737 Active, not recruiting - Obesity Clinical Trials

A Virtual Cardiometabolic Health Program for African Immigrants: The Afro-DPP Program

Start date: November 21, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A pilot study titled "A Virtual Cardiometabolic Health Program for African Immigrants (The Afro-DPP Program) will be conducted to address the cardiometabolic of community-dwelling African immigrants who have multiple cardiometabolic risk factors including hypertension, Type 2 Diabetes, high cholesterol, and overweight/obesity. The proposed study will recruit a total of 60 participants and will use a non-equivalent control group design to test the effectiveness of the intervention at two African churches in the Baltimore, Washington, D.C. area. The two churches will be randomly assigned to the intervention or delayed intervention group. At the end of a 6-month follow-up period, the control church will receive the intervention (delayed control group). All participants will receive a Bluetooth-enabled digital scale (Omron Model: BCM-500) that measures body composition including Body Weight, Body Fat percentage, Visceral Fat, Skeletal Muscle percentage, Resting Metabolism and Body Mass Index. A Bluetooth-enabled blood pressure monitor (Omron Model: BP7250) will also be distributed to all participants. All participants will download the Omron Connect app which will allow the participants to sync participants' blood pressure readings and body composition readings into the app. The research team will access these readings to monitor study outcomes and participants progress during the follow-up period.

NCT ID: NCT05104151 Completed - Clinical trials for Overweight or Obesity

Efficacy of a Nutritive Bar, in Reduction of Weight, Body Fat and Control of Appetite

Start date: October 20, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The main objective of the trial is to measure the efficacy of a nutritive bar, in the reduction of weight, body fat and the control of appetite, in patients with overweight and obesity. It will be a randomized single-blind design conducted in 40 subjects.

NCT ID: NCT05087342 Recruiting - Obesity Clinical Trials

Latino Semaglutide Study

LSS
Start date: December 13, 2022
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study to understand better how this anti-obesity medication works to assist individuals to lose weight and maintain weight loss. This study may lead to the development of other related medications for assisting people with the disease of obesity.

NCT ID: NCT05061472 Active, not recruiting - Eating Behavior Clinical Trials

A 6-month Observational Study on Combined Oral Contraceptives and Body Weight in Pre-Menopausal Women With Overweight or Obesity

Start date: May 23, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Approximately 15 million women of reproductive age women in the United States have overweight or obesity and use the combined estrogen and progestin oral contraceptive pill (COC). Although many women report weight gain as a side effect of COCs, a conclusive link between COC use and weight gain has not been established. This investigation will address a major gap in the literature by prospectively evaluating the influence of initiating a COC versus non-hormonal contraceptives (NHCs) on weight, body composition, eating behaviors, and appetite in pre-menopausal women with overweight or obesity. Aim 1 will assess the feasibility of recruiting and retaining a racially/ethnically diverse group of women with overweight and obesity while Aim 2 will explore changes in body weight, body composition, and cardiometabolic risks in these women; Aim 3 will explore changes in dietary and macronutrient energy intake, eating behaviors, and appetite in this subset of women. This research will help the investigators understand the extent to which COCs are associated with weight gain and help guide medical providers in counseling women with overweight and obesity on appropriate contraceptive methods.

NCT ID: NCT05005741 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2

The Effects of Glucose Control and Weight Loss Between Beinaglutide and Dulaglutide in Type 2 Diabetes With Overweight or Obesity.

Start date: May 1, 2021
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This study is a multi-center, open label, randomized controlled trial that main purpose of this study is to evaluate the differences of glucose control and weight loss between Beinaglutide and Dulaglutide in type 2 diabetes with overweight or or Obesity.

NCT ID: NCT05000437 Completed - Overweight Clinical Trials

The Effectiveness and Safety of HIIT in Overweight Male Subjects

Start date: November 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Increased prevalence of overweight and obesity is one of the main health problems recently. Energy balance from nutrition intake and energy expenditure through physical activity, especially structured physical activity, is needed to prevent overweight individuals become obese individuals. This research objective is to explore the effectiveness and safety of structured high intensity interval training in male young adults subjects with overweight based on change of body composition, oxidative stress and inflammatory markers. This research used experimental model to test structured high intensity interval training program with pre-post test in single group. Comprehensive analysis of training effect in this research consists of measurement of several parameters, such as body composition, inflammatory markers, and oxidative stress markers as the benchmark of training safety. Browning white adipose tissue and cognitive function are complement parameters to the assessment of training effectiveness. Daily food record and physical activity for 3 x 24 hours will be carried out periodically to control confounding factors.

NCT ID: NCT04894344 Completed - Hypertension Clinical Trials

Education to Decrease in Sodium Intake Evaluated With 24 Hour Urinary Sodium Excretion (RCT)

RCT
Start date: October 28, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

WHO identifies as an important risk factor and potentially modifiable to high sodium intake (>2g/day 5g salt/day). Also, an insufficient consumption of potassium ( 3.5 g/day).Therefore, the results of this research could be the regional basis that is required to generate evidence, that designs strategies and recommendations for the prevention or decrease in the progression of high blood pressure. The reduction in the consumption of salt in the diet could comply with the recommendations established by international agencies. In addition, to favor the beginning of lifestyle changes, as well as other modifications that will have a positive impact on health.In population highly vulnerable to the campaigns of large industries that favor the consumption of processed food. However, it is unknown what is the effect of reducing foods high in sodium in populations in different regions of Mexico, estimated by 24 hour urine sodium excretion. Therefore, the present study aims to answer the following questions: What impact does an intervention aimed at the decrease in sodium intake, in young university students on blood pressure and the quantification of the excretion of sodium and urinary potassium of 24h? What is the association between body mass index, blood pressure and sodium reduction in the intervention vs control group? To assess the impact of an intervention aimed at reducing sodium intake through education as general recommendations for limiting specific foods high in sodium, in university students on blood pressure and quantification of urinary sodium and potassium excretion of 24h. Specific objectives Assess sodium intake between the intervention group and the control group by estimating 24-hour urinary sodium excretion. secundary objectives Evaluate the effect between the intervention group and the control group on blood pressure. To assess the levels of potassium excretion in the intervention and control groups. To evaluate the association between body mass index, blood pressure and sodium reduction in the intervention and control groups.

NCT ID: NCT04875091 Completed - Weight Loss Clinical Trials

Understanding Variability in Behavioral Weight Loss Treatment Response in Young Women (Ready SET Health)

Start date: July 28, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study is a single-arm behavioral weight loss intervention for emerging adult women with in-person assessments at 0 (baseline) and 4 months (post-treatment) in addition to EMA data collection regarding risk factors known to interfere with program engagement and weight loss in this high-risk population (e.g., sleep, psychological distress, life events).

NCT ID: NCT04848532 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Overweight or Obesity

Problematic Decision-Making and Adolescent Weight Loss

REACH
Start date: February 3, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study evaluates the associations between baseline decision-making processes, engagement in problematic dietary practices, and post-intervention weight loss outcomes among adolescents. Results from the study will provide specific direction for what components should comprise future decision-making interventions for adolescents with overweight/obesity.

NCT ID: NCT04826861 Completed - Clinical trials for Overweight or Obesity

Supporting Lifestyle Change in Obese Pregnant Mothers Through Wearable Internet-of-Things (SLIM)

SLIM
Start date: April 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Maternal obesity increases risks for the mother and her child. It is crucial to arouse the pregnant and postpartum women´s willingness of change and motivation to take care of their own and their unborn child´s health. Wearable devices can be helpful for weight-management, e.g. in improving participant's self-efficacy in making healthy behavior changes, improving self-awareness, in goal setting and getting feedback. More comprehensive research is required to implement the optimal weight-management intervention for overweight women during pregnancy and the postpartum period and to develop appropriate and feasible implementation strategies to support nurses to deliver interventions in maternity clinics. The aim of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of the Supporting Lifestyle Change in Obese Pregnant Mothers Through Wearable Internet-of-Things (SLIM) intervention. Secondary aim is to evaluate the implementation of SLIM intervention in maternity care. Intervention was developed based on findings of overweight women and their care givers interview study. The intervention targeting overweight pregnant women to improve their weight-management will be delivered during routine perinatal visits from the first visit to three months after child birth. Interventions core components will be goalsetting, motivational interviewing, feedback and health technology. Health technology includes Oura-ring and ZotCare -application. ZotCare -application combines data from Oura Smart Ring, electronic food diary and it´s also platform for researchers to send e.g. questionnaires and surveys to participants. Oura-smartring is an advanced technology ring that monitors e.g. heart rate, heart rate variability (HRV), steps, body temperature and sleep) and a smartphone application that includes data from Oura, and electronic food diary. Data collected with Oura -smartrings will be transmitted to cloud servers via a smartphone. The cloud will be responsible for storing the data and for performing the data preprocessing and analysis methods. Interventions primary outcome will be self-efficacy. Secondary outcomes will be womens weight, depression symptoms, quality of life, pregnancy anxiety, perceived stress, sence of coherence and acceptability, appropriateness and feasibility of Intervention. Data will be collected via Oura smartring, electronic food diary and validated measures: Weight Efficacy Life-Style Questionnaire (WEL), Self-Efficacy for Physical Activity Scale (PASE), six-factor questionnaire (6-FQ), Three Factor Eating Questionnaire (TFEQ-R18), WHOQOL-BREF, Sense of coherence (SOC-13), Pregnancy anxiety (PRAQ-R2), Perceived stress and Edinburgh Postnatal Depression scale (EPDS). Intervention implementation will be evaluated with process evaluation. Data will be collected from public health nurses working in maternity clinics using focus group interviews and workshops.