View clinical trials related to Overweight.
Filter by:The primary objective of the project is to adapt and implement a combined weight management intervention (an online program plus coaching and patient navigator support) across multiple settings and a diverse cross-section of patients and providers affiliated with Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH). The overall goals of the proposed project are: 1. To improve management of overweight and obesity in clinical and community settings. 2. To improve outcomes among patients with overweight or obesity. To accomplish these goals, the investigators will engage with various stakeholders to adapt the combined intervention, implement the intervention across multiple settings and a diverse cross-section of patients and providers affiliated with BWH, evaluate the impact of the implementation, and create an implementation guide for dissemination. The specific aims of the proposed project are as follows: Aim 1: To continue to engage with patients, providers, and other stakeholders to adapt and integrate the intervention in a variety of clinical and community settings. Aim 2: To implement the intervention in a variety of patients and settings and to evaluate its impact on outcomes, using the RE-AIM framework. Aim 3: To evaluate maintenance of the intervention six months after formal implementation activities have ended, and to prepare a detailed implementation guide to help increase future reach and uptake.
The overall objective of this research entity is to reveal the holistic health impact of oats in metabolically challenged individuals in a 6-week intervention, compared to that of rice. This is achieved by investigation of the plasma lipids, plasma antioxidant status, fecal microbiota and fecal bile acids. Additionally the effect of the 6-week diet on posptprandial glycemia and postprandial satiety and vitality are investigated.
Childhood obesity is a significant public health concern worldwide. In China, childhood obesity has dramatically increased as the economy has grown quickly over the past decades. Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is tightly associated with obesity, in China, the prevalence of NAFLD in obesity children is 40.0%,the main interventions for NAFLD are lifestyle interventions. Effective strategies to helping students lose weight and alleviate NAFLD through lifestyle interventions may help promote the physical and mental health of obese students. This study aimed (1)to assess the effectiveness of the intervention compared with the usual practice in treating childhood overweight and obesity; (2) to determine the sustainability of the treatment in preventing overweight and obesity; (3) to help alleviate or reverse NAFLD in obesity children. Children with overweight and obesity in six primary schools in Ningbo City, Zhejiang Province will be seleted and randomly divided into two groups: the treatment group and the usual practice group. The participants of the study were students in the third grade of primary school, and the treatment will last for one academic year. This treatment activity on lifestyle interventions will target the dietary and exercise factors of childhood obesity.
Synbiotic is a nutritional supplement that contains both prebiotic and probiotic. Probiotics are beneficial microorganisms, while prebiotics are foods that help the growth of beneficial microorganisms in the gut. In the study, dietary intervention with fruits and vegetables and/or synbiotic supplementation with be administered to Hong Kong Chinese subjects for eight weeks. Changes in the composition and diversity of intestinal microbiota, and markers indicative of obesity, chronic inflammation and metabolic dysfunction will be assessed throughout the whole period. This study will further provide a scientific basis for the intake of synbiotics for reducing the risk of overweight and obesity among Hong Kong Chinese. Furthermore, the results will bridge to further research into the most desirable gut microbiome profile, hence facilitating personalised nutrition for optimal health.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and performance of DTXO App in improving weight loss and weight-loss maintenance in obese patients exposed to an experimental non-pharmacological treatment program. The App will include a dietary plan and customized advice program, a customized physical exercise program plan, a cognitive- behavioral assessment and support program, alerts and reminders on prescribed drugs intake and on dietary and exercise program, chat and online visits with clinical professionals, and trophies to improve patient engagement.
This study will look at how well the new medicine CagriSema helps people living with excess body weight and type 2 diabetes losing weight. Participants will either get CagriSema or a dummy medicine. Which treatment they get is decided by chance. The study will last for about 1½ years. Women cannot take part if pregnant, breast-feeding or planning to get pregnant during the study period.
The main purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of LY3541105 in healthy and overweight participants. Blood tests will be performed to check how much LY3541105 gets into the bloodstream and how long it takes the body to eliminate it. The study will also evaluate the effects of LY3541105 on body weight and assess safety and tolerability of LY3541105. This is a 3-part study and may last up to 15, 26 and 24 weeks for each participant and may include up to 7, 15 and 16 visits in parts A, B and C, respectively.
The cornerstone in the initial treatment of type 2 diabetes (T2D) is lifestyle modification, involving-among other things-a healthy diet. However, scientific evidence regarding optimal nutrition therapy for patients with T2D is insufficient. This clinical study will examine the effect of a carbohydrate-reduced high-protein (CRHP) diet compared to a conventional diabetes (CD) diet for 12 months on metabolic function and body weight in patients with T2D. The hypothesis of the study is that the CRHP diet will improve metabolic control and the cardiovascular risk profile of patients with T2D to a greater extent than the CD diet. In particular, the expectation is that, compared with the CD diet, the CRHP diet will: - Reduce diurnal and postprandial glycemia measured by continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) and thereby facilitate a significant reduction of glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) - Reduce body weight - Reduce ectopic fat deposition in the liver and the pancreas - Improve the blood lipid profile - Reduce or not affect blood pressure with no adverse effect on heart rate variability - Increase insulin sensitivity and secretion - Decrease inflammatory markers in the blood - Improve satiety - Reduce or not affect the need for antidiabetic, antihypertensive and/or lipid-lowering medications To reinforce the results and knowledge generated from the primary study, participants will be invited to partake in a 12-month follow-up period after the initial 12 months of intervention.
This two-group RCT, the Mindful-Healthy Family project, will test the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of a mindfulness-based Motivational Interviewing (MM-based-MI) intervention with rural families within Michigan. This two-group RCT will enroll 34-60 families from Michigan rural or suburban communities with one OW/O parent-figure adult (BMI ≥25) who has at least one child (ages 3-6) at home. The targeted parents will serve as the change agent. The outcome assessments include BMI and optional hair cortisol as well as parent's collective family efficacy, perceived stress, depression score, 24 hours dietary recall (ASA24; healthy eating index [HEI]), mindful eating score, Physical Activity (IPAQ-short) at both baseline and post-intervention. These intervention group families will receive 9 online sessions (30 min/session) delivered via Zoom or phone calls every other week by trained research staff. BMI will be obtained directly from the participating parents using the scale delivered to their homes. Attention control arm families will have same assessment and will receive a total of 9 mailed packets of educational materials. This work will advance the science by explicating how MM and MI work synergistically.
The purpose of the Deaf Weight Wise Implementation Study is to study with diverse partners the approaches and strategies that lead to successful implementation of Deaf Weight Wise (DWW), an evidence-based healthy lifestyle intervention for use with Deaf adult American Sign Language (ASL) users. The implementation hypothesis is that diverse community organizations will successfully implement DWW with their constituents.