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Postpartum Weight Retention clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Postpartum Weight Retention.

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NCT ID: NCT06098638 Completed - Clinical trials for Postpartum Weight Retention

Effect of Aerobic and Resisted Exercise on Lipid Profile and Quality of Life in Overweight Breastfeeding Women

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

the aim of the study was to investigate the effect of aerobic and resisted exercise program on lipid profile and quality of life in overweight breastfeeding women.

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: NCT05579990 Recruiting - Obesity Clinical Trials

Feasibility of Meal Delivery Postpartum

Start date: September 27, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study is being done to assess the feasibility and acceptability of a meal delivery intervention among low-income postpartum women with obesity.

NCT ID: NCT05518604 Recruiting - Weight Loss Clinical Trials

Weight Loss and Physical Fitness Following Pregnancy in Active Duty Women

PADaWL
Start date: January 22, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Pregnancy and delivery are major stressors on the female body and contribute significantly to permanent weight gain and associated morbidity in women. This can profoundly affect the ability of active duty (AD) women to advance in their career. The first 12 weeks postpartum are the time period during which the most significant weight loss occurs and is critical in achieving a healthy weight in the first year postpartum. Many factors contribute to effective weight loss in this period among which the most critical are diet, exercise, and sleep. Breast feeding and depression may also affect weight changes postpartum. Research has shown diet to likely be the most crucial of these factors. The PADaWL study is designed as a randomized controlled trial to assess the effects of dietary intervention on weight and physical fitness versus routine postpartum care in the first year postpartum. Subjects will be primiparous AD women from any military service recruited in the obstetric clinic in the third trimester of pregnancy at Tripler Army Medical Center. Data will collected in an ambi-directional fashion with pre-pregnancy physical fitness data, demographic and pregnancy data collected at time of enrollment. Subjects will be randomized to receive intensive virtual sessions with a dietician vs routine postpartum care for the first 12 months postpartum. We will utilize a biometric device to monitor activity levels and sleep, web-based diaries to monitor breast feeding and diet, and validated questionnaires to evaluate depression as well as diet and sleep. Subjects will be monitored weekly for the first 12 weeks postpartum and will then be further evaluated at 6, 9 and 12 months postpartum. Primary outcome is weight at 12weeks postpartum and whether subjects have achieved military standards. Secondary outcome will be weight at 12 months postpartum and whether subject has achieved weight and fitness standards. The study intends to collect large amounts of data, and we intend to analyze which factors may be contributing to weight retention postpartum. This study should provide an accurate assessment of the effects of pregnancy on AD women. It should generate a clean and accurate dataset on which multiple follow-on studies can be performed and provide data for designing further intervention studies in postpartum women. The results of this study should also be able to assist in developing policy and guidance concerning AD women and pregnancy.

NCT ID: NCT05399784 Completed - Breastfeeding Clinical Trials

Postpartum Visit Timing and the Effect on Visit Attendance

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

The objective of this study is to assess if the addition of an early postpartum visit improves attendance at postpartum visits. We seek to evaluate if an additional early postpartum visit improves patient education, satisfaction, or trust in the clinicians during the postpartum period; all of which may ultimately facilitate improved outcomes. Additionally, we seek to explore patient preferences for postpartum care delivery.

NCT ID: NCT04992637 Completed - Obesity Clinical Trials

ClockWork Postpartum Weight Management Study

Start date: July 30, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The ClockWork Postpartum Weight Management Pilot Study is an intervention study that will assess the feasibility, acceptability, and initial efficacy of the ClockWork intervention among women with prepregnancy overweight/obesity during the first 4 months postpartum.

NCT ID: NCT04914819 Completed - Weight Loss Clinical Trials

Postpartum Weight Loss for Women at Elevated Cardiovascular Risk

EMPOWER-Mom
Start date: June 18, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this study is to test the feasibility and effectiveness of a 16-week online behavioral weight loss program compared to usual care to promote weight loss in the postpartum period among women with cardiovascular risk factors. The investigators will also be testing different behavioral strategies to recruit postpartum women to the study, including 2 email recruitment strategies and 2 mailer recruitment strategies, informed by behavioral design.

NCT ID: NCT04866823 Completed - Clinical trials for Diabetes, Gestational

Meals for Moms: Medically-Tailored Meals for Women Who Had Gestational Diabetes

Start date: October 20, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this research study is to test whether delivery of medically tailored meals (meals designed specifically to be healthy) can be used to help reduce high blood sugar after delivery of a baby. Participants will be recruited and consented during the third trimester of pregnancy but will begin study activities after delivery. Participants will complete a series of questionnaires on demographics, health history, home environment, overall and financial stress, plans for weight loss and infant feeding, and food insecurity. Participants will also be asked to wear continuous glucose monitors for two separate 14-day periods (within 2 weeks of delivery and at 3 months). All participants will receive weekly emails with educational videos and 3 virtual visits with a member of the study team and will also be randomly assigned to an intervention or comparison group. In the intervention, participants will receive weekly meal deliveries of 10 pre-prepared meals from Providence Community Kitchen (local company in Winston-Salem, NC) that are calorically restricted and appropriate for post-partum women with a history of gestational diabetes and who may be breast-feeding. Women in the control condition will receive written resources on self-care, nutrition, and physical activity appropriate for post-partum women who had gestational diabetes.

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.

NCT ID: NCT04449432 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Overweight and Obesity

Goals for Reaching Optimal Wellness: GROWell

Start date: December 14, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Despite the negative consequences to maternal-child health from women gaining too much weight during pregnancy, up to 62% of overweight and obese women gain more pregnancy weight than is recommended. This project will establish the efficacy of Goals for Reaching Optimal Wellness (GROWell), an mHealth tool for achieving appropriate pregnancy weight gain and promoting postpartum weight loss among women who enter pregnancy overweight or obese. GROWell will fill a gap in research and clinical care by providing a validated, standalone mHealth tool for weight control during pregnancy and postpartum, which is a currently lacking resource.