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Active clinical trials for "Obesity, Maternal"

Results 1-10 of 38

Expanding the Family Check-Up in Early Childhood to Promote Cardiovascular Health of Mothers and...

ObesityMaternal5 more

This randomized-controlled pilot study will examine the implementation of a cardiovascular health intervention on postpartum mothers and infants. The investigators will adapt a cardiovascular health intervention into an evidence-based home visiting program, Family Check-Up to create Family Check-Up Heart. Through a Type 1 hybrid effectiveness implementation design, the pilot study will test the feasibility and effectiveness of Family Check-Up Heart (Family Check-Up Heart, n=100; Family Check-Up, n=50). The investigators hypothesize that Family Check-Up Heart will show comparable levels of engagement and acceptability as Family Check-Up alone, and mothers receiving Family Check-Up Heart will have greater improvements in cardiovascular health at 6 months postpartum compared to Family Check-Up alone.

Recruiting12 enrollment criteria

Evaluation and Implementation of an mHealth Intervention Called Mami-educ to Fight Against Gestational...

Gestational Weight GainObesity1 more

The World Federation of Obesity warns that the main health problem of the next decade will be childhood obesity. Furthermore, obesity and its consequences have been reported to originate in intrauterine life. Gestational obesity produces profound effects on fetal genome programming, thereby inducing changes in prenatal metabolism that extend to the postnatal period, which is also associated with increased susceptibility to developing cardiovascular and metabolic diseases in adulthood. Excessive maternal weight gain early in pregnancy has been repeatedly associated with increased adiposity in childhood and adolescence of its offspring. Obesity is a complex phenomenon influenced by social determinants of health, which include demographic, socioeconomic, behavioral, environmental, and genetic factors. At the primary prevention level, nutrition constitutes a modifiable risk factor during pregnancy. Therefore establishing healthy nutritional behaviors during the first trimester of pregnancy is key to the primary prevention of the intergenerational transmission of obesity. New ways of approaching the target population are required to maintain nutritional recommendations as a priority in the daily decision-making (top of mind) of pregnant women. For many women, this period is a powerful motivator for self-care. Interventions based on behavioral theories provide a better understanding of the underlying mechanisms that determine health-related behavior change and have the potential to be more effective in promoting adherence to weight gain control. Social Cognitive Theory (TCS) is an integrated model of behavior change commonly applied in mobile health interventions that address diet, physical activity or weight loss. Mobile health programs (mHealth) are potentially more effective than face-to-face interventions, especially during a public health emergency like the COVID-19 outbreak. This proposal intends to "deliver" messages with evidence-based information directly to pregnant women, in order to influence their nutritional behavior to avoid excessive gestational weight gain. The hypothesis of this proposal is that the mHealth intervention called "mami-educ", which consists of sending messages with nutrition counseling during pregnancy through the Telegram platform, is effective in reducing excessive gestational weight gain in pregnant women attending Family Health Care Centers in an urban and predominantly rural area.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria

Healthy Early Life Moments in Singapore

Metabolic DiseaseMental Health Wellness 12 more

This study aims to assess whether an integrated continuum of care from the preconception period, across maternity until the first 18 months of life, can promote maternal metabolic and mental health, as well as offspring health, among overweight and obese women.

Recruiting14 enrollment criteria

Electronic-personalized Program for Obesity in Pregnancy to Improve Delivery

ObesityPregnancy

The purpose of this study is to assess the efficacy of an electronic-based intervention to help pregnant overweight and obese women gain an appropriate amount of weight and improve their delivery i.e. to reduce the rate of labour procedures and interventions. We chose a composite outcome including instrumental delivery and Caesarean section, as clinically relevant outcomes because the mode of delivery is one of the major goals of the obstetrical management and is is strongly associated with body mass index and gestational weight gain.

Recruiting17 enrollment criteria

Best Start - Weight Management During Pregnancy

Obesity in Pregnancy

The investigators know that being overweight during pregnancy increases the health risks to both mum and baby. There is good evidence that diet or exercise, or both, during pregnancy can reduce excessive weight gain. The Best Start study aims to test the theory that obese pregnant women with a Body Mass Index (BMI) of 30 or over who participate in a structured programme of nutrition and lifestyle advice (Foodwise in Pregnancy ™) will achieve the recommended weight gain during pregnancy of no less than 5kg and no more than 9.1kg. The investigators would like to find out if pregnant women with a BMI of 30 or over who receive the Best Start intervention are more likely to effectively manage weight gain during pregnancy. To achieve this, the investigators will undertake a trial that randomly puts participants into an experimental group, or a control group, which will compare those who receive the intervention to those who continue with routine antenatal care. The investigators are aiming to recruit around 500 women during the study period. 250 will receive the Best Start intervention, and 250 will continue with routine antenatal care. The investigators would also like to find out if women who gain the recommended weight during pregnancy have better outcomes, compared to women who gain more or less weight. To do this the investigators will look at the routine information collected during antenatal and postnatal care, for both mum and baby. To do this regardless of the group clients are randomised to, the investigators will ask for permission to look at the routine information within the participants maternity record. This information includes, weight gained during pregnancy, whether the baby is born early, the type of labour and delivery, and any complications during the pregnancy or delivery that may have resulted in the need for additional care for mum or baby. The results of the study will be prepared for publication in scientific journals, and for presentation at scientific conferences. All participants will be able to obtain a copy of the results once they have been published and any information that could identify participants will be removed.

Active9 enrollment criteria

Obesity and OSA in Pregnancy

ObesityObesity3 more

The purposes of this project are 1) to compare the impact of maternal obesity versus excessive gestational weight gain on obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) in obese and non-obese women; 2) to investigate the mechanism(s) by which obesity and OSA increase cardiovascular risk during pregnancy; and 3) to identify biomarker(s) for obesity-related OSA in pregnant women.

Recruiting18 enrollment criteria

The Extension of HAPO Follow-up Study

HyperglycemiaPregnancy6 more

The prevalence of diabetes mellitus (DM) and cardiovascular disease (CVD) escalate remarkably worldwide and obesity becomes an epidemic disease. This study is interested in how the model of Developmental Origin of Health and Disease (DOHaD) influence individual's health status as they reach young adulthood. Since the mothers from HAPO study have not been subjected to antenatal treatment on the various degree of maternal hyperglycaemia in pregnancy, this would be an unique cohort that allows determination of the effect of various degree of maternal hyperglycaemia below the level of overt DM, on children's cardiometabolic risk in Chinese population.

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

Maternal Obesity and Offspring Neurodevelopment

Healthy

Our goals are to characterize the effects of maternal obesity during pregnancy on infant brain development, reveal the neurodevelopmental consequences, and identify possible mechanisms causing these effects. Our overall hypothesis is that maternal obesity during pregnancy exposes the fetus to an inflammatory environment that affects infant brain structural and functional development and consequently neurodevelopmental outcomes. To test this hypothesis, the investigators will recruit normal-weight and obese pregnant women, examine inflammatory markers associated with obese pregnancy, and correlate them with offspring's brain development evaluated using quantitative MRI methods and outcomes evaluated using neurodevelopmental tests.

Recruiting9 enrollment criteria

Obesogenic Origins of Maternal and Child Metabolic Health Involving Dolutegravir

HIVObesity4 more

A total of 1900 pregnant women in the 1st trimester and their children will be enrolled and followed for two years (ORCHID study main cohort). As part of this, mother-infant pairs will be required to attend up to 10 study visits separate from routine clinic visits, these visits include 3 antenatal visits (less than or equal to 18, 24-28 and 32-36 weeks) and 7 postnatal visits (<2 and 6 weeks, 3, 6, 12, 18 and 24 months). Measurements in mothers will include demographics and health status, HIV disease and ART use, intercurrent medical history including concomitant medication use, HIV viral load testing, ART adherence, HIV antibody testing in women without HIV; body composition, caloric intake, dysglycemia and insulin resistance (IR), lipid profiles, anthropometry, resting energy expenditure, hepatic steatosis, specimen collection (whole blood, plasma, serum, urine, placenta and breastmilk), systemic and adipose inflammation, as well as metabolites, lipid subspecies and eicosanoids. Measurements in infants will include uterine gestational age and fetal growth, as well as metabolites, lipid subspecies and eicosanoids, body composition, dysglycemia and IR, lipid profiles, anthropometry, feeding, specimen collection (cord blood, whole blood, plasma and serum) and intercurrent medical history including concomitant medication use. Additional data on maternal health in pregnancy and birth outcomes will be abstracted from medical records.

Recruiting15 enrollment criteria

The Microbiome in (Non-) Obese Pregnancy and Pregnancy Outcomes

ObesityMaternal2 more

This research aims to elucidate an underlying mechanism of maternal obesity induced pregnancy and longterm health complications for mothers and their offspring.

Recruiting12 enrollment criteria
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