Behavioral Family Systems Therapy for Teens With Type 2 Diabetes
Diabetes MellitusType 21 moreThis is a randomized, controlled pilot trial of Behavioral Family Systems Therapy for Teens with Type 2 Diabetes (BFST-DM2), an individual psychological intervention tailored to meet the needs of teens with type 2 diabetes. It is hypothesized that this behavioral family intervention will be feasible to implement with teens with type 2 diabetes and will have positive effects on treatment adherence, health outcomes like weight status and metabolic control, and psychological outcomes.
Integrated Child Obesity Treatment Study: Bull City Healthy and Fit
Childhood ObesityThe primary aim of this study is to reduce body mass index (BMI) among children ages 5-11 who are obese by integrating behavioral treatment strategies in both clinic (Healthy Lifestyles) and community (Bull City Fit) settings. A two-group randomized, controlled, non-blinded pilot design will be utilized. The intended target population is the adult caregiver and a child with obesity (BMI ≥ 95th percentile) aged 5-11. The intervention condition will be standard care with Healthy Lifestyles programming plus Bull City Fit; upcoming activities will be texted to the parents mobile device using GoogleVoice. The control condition will be standard clinical care with Healthy Lifestyles programming. Primary outcome is BMI at 6 months. Secondary outcomes include anthropometric, psychosocial, and reported health behaviors.
The Effects of Group Exercise and Basketball on Obese Children
Childhood ObesityPhysical ActivityThis study aimed to compare the effects of group exercises under physiotherapist control and basketball program on body composition and motor skills of obese children. 45 obese children aged 10 years were randomly included to the physiotherapy (n=15), basketball (n:15), and control group (n:15). The children were assessed before and after 12-week study duration. Body Mass Index (BMI), the percentage of body fat, and circumference values of the children were recorded. Bruininks-Oseretsky Test of Motor Proficiency-Brief Form (BOTMP-BF) was used to determine motor skills of children.
Wellness and Weight Family Group Project
Pediatric ObesityThe purpose of the current study is examine the feasibility and efficacy of providing a behavioral family intervention in 30 youth 10 to 17 years of age who are obese and attending a multidisciplinary pediatric obesity clinic and their parents. Participating families will complete assessments consisting of weight status, dietary intake, physical activity, health-related quality of life, psychological functioning, home-food environment, parenting skills, and self-efficacy at pre-treatment (Baseline), post-treatment (Month 3), and 2 month post-treatment follow-up (Month 5). Family attendance data will be collected during the behavioral family intervention and children and parents will complete a treatment satisfaction questionnaire at the post-treatment assessment. Health outcomes (e.g., A1C, glucose) routinely assessed through standard medical care in the multidisciplinary pediatric obesity clinic will be obtained from child medical charts.
Parent Mentor Interventions for Early Childhood Obesity
ObesityChildhoodThe purpose of this clinical trial is to identify the most effective strategy for intervention to change behaviors and affect weight status in obese children 2-5 years of age within the context of early childhood education centers.
GOOD-DAY Trial in Paediatric Obesity
ObesityChildhoodAlongside efforts in public health and policy to reverse the childhood obesity epidemic, medical providers seek to play effective roles in prevention and treatment. Limited interventional studies with effective long-term maintenance of weight loss in children are available. Moreover, interventions should focus on modifying lifestyle, by improving also ludic educational training. In fact, the knowledge, attitudes, behaviors and skills developed through effective health programs may result in a better quality of life and empower children to make correct choices to promote the health of the individual the family and the community. For this reason, in a cohort of obese pediatric subjects with visceral adiposity, the aim of the study is to assess the efficacy of an educational training inspired to Mediterranean diet and based on gamification (as "The Mediterranean Goose") with respect to a conventional treatment on weight loss and improvement of cardio-metabolic risk factors.
Children's Taste Study to Increase Vegetable Intake in Preschoolers
Pediatric ObesityStudies have shown that when exposed to a variety of food and flavor options people tend to consume more than when only one item is presented. This strategy has been used to increase vegetable intake in adults and during snacktime in children. Increasing vegetable consumption in children is important because higher vegetable intake has been associated with reduced risk of disease and because vegetables can help prevent weight gain by lowering the energy density of a meal. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of using herb and spice blends to create flavor variety in carrots as a model vegetable in a laboratory test meal. We predict that children will consume more vegetables and that the energy density of the meal will be lower when a variety of seasoned carrots are presented in comparison to a single flavor. A secondary goal of the study was to determine other influences that may predict children's liking and intake of seasoned vegetables, such as previous exposure, infant feeding practices, and genetic bitter sensitivity.
Improving Cardiometabolic Health of Youth on Antipsychotic Medication
Childhood ObesityPediatric antipsychotic treatment is associated with significant obesity-related side effects, including weight gain, increased blood sugar, abnormal cholesterol, and risk of new onset diabetes. Antipsychotic-induced weight gain is most prominent over the first 6 months of treatment. In this study, youths who are started on antipsychotic medication are identified for a health intervention to minimize antipsychotic-induced weight gain and also have collateral health benefits for the child's parent. Children are identified through a Medicaid medication authorization program which provides a complete list of eligible youth. Youth-parent pairs will be enrolled. All youth and their parents enrolled in this study are offered healthy lifestyle education with simple targets to reduce risk of antipsychotic-induced weight gain (e.g. reduce sugar sweetened beverage intake, engage in 1 hour of daily physical activity). Half of families will also receive 1) home delivery of bottled water, 2) provision of a child pedometer, and 3) health coaching/support from a telephone-delivered, parent peer program (Family Navigator). Home water delivery has been demonstrated to dramatically reduce sugar sweetened beverage intake in general pediatric studies. Child pedometers will be used to encourage parent monitoring of child physical activity. Parent peer support will be provided through a Family Navigator, who is a parent with "lived experience" raising a child with special mental health needs. Family Navigators address practical barriers to lifestyle changes for low income families (e.g. identify safe environment for physical activity, support access to food pantries) and provide emotional support for parents dealing with competing child health priorities (emotional stability, obesity health concerns). Family Navigator contact is exclusively by phone, and all study visits will occur in the home. The Family Navigators are supervised by a child mental health expert team, with an on-call licensed clinician available to address any after hours/weekend urgent concerns. The impact of this intervention will be studied on both child and parent health outcomes (weight, blood pressure, sugar sweetened beverage consumption), child physical activity, as well as parent behaviors associated with child healthy lifestyle changes (e.g. modeling healthy behaviors, monitoring child activity). Assessment of the impact of this healthy lifestyle intervention on other obesity related outcomes that are monitored through blood work (e.g. blood sugar, cholesterol). These labs are obtained by community prescribers as part of standard of care and submitted to Medicaid as required for ongoing approval. No blood work will be done in this study protocol. Child lab results will be requested from the Medicaid pre-authorization program.
Developing a Preschool Obesity Intervention for Families Enrolled in WIC
Pediatric ObesityThe purpose of this study is to examine the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of a community and home-based preschool obesity intervention for families enrolled in the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC).
Does Mindfulness Enhance BMI in Obese Adolescents Enrolled in the Bright Bodies Weight Management...
Pediatric ObesityParticipants will be randomized to an evidence-based healthy lifestyle program alone or a healthy lifestyle program with mindfulness meditation added. The purpose of the study will be to determine if mindfulness improves BMI outcomes more than the program alone due to the stress-reduction benefits of mindfulness.