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Active clinical trials for "Pediatric Obesity"

Results 381-390 of 921

Lifestyle Modification Intervention for Obese Children

Childhood ObesityLife Style Modification

Interventions that encompass behavioral modifications of dietary intake and physical activity dietary management are essential for the management of obese children. This study assessed the effectiveness of a stage-based lifestyle modification intervention for obese children. A total of 50 obese children (7-11 years) were randomized to intervention (n=25) or control (n=25) group. Data were collected at baseline, at follow-up (every month) and at six-month post-intervention. The intervention group (IG) received stage-based lifestyle modification intervention based on Nutrition Practice Guideline for the Management of Childhood Obesity, while the control group (CG) received standard treatment. Changes in body composition, physical activity, and dietary intake were examined in both intervention and control groups.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Competency-based Approaches to Community Health

ObesityChildhood

This study is a family-centered, community-based intervention to prevent and treat childhood obesity among 3-5 year old children from undeserved communities. Half of participants will receive a healthy lifestyle intervention and half of participants will receive a school-readiness intervention.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Active Recreation Through Community-Healthcare Engagement Study

Childhood ObesityQuality of Life

Current obesity treatment guidelines recommend 26 or more hours of behavior treatment, delivered over a 6-month period in a multidisciplinary weight management clinic. However, this guideline is not feasible in real-world clinic settings where medical visits are costly and poorly reimbursed, and attrition is high, particularly among the most vulnerable children. The National Collaborative on Child Obesity Research has issued a call for research investigating healthcare-community partnerships to improve the effectiveness of child obesity treatment. The World Health Organization supports this approach, and in 2015 modified the chronic disease model to include healthcare-community integration. ARCHES is a three-year project that will develop and evaluate an effective, engaging, and scalable community-healthcare treatment option for low-income and racially diverse children. The project engages four communities in North Carolina and facilitates a local clinic-community partnership, supports the development of an integrated childhood obesity treatment program, and evaluates the feasibility of the integrated program model. The effectiveness of the integrated model will also be evaluated, as we will monitor patient outcomes associated with participation. Participation among teens (ages 11-18) will be incentivized where teen/caregiver dyads will be randomized to a gain or loss frame group at the beginning of the study and have the opportunity to receive and redeem points for attending sessions. Patient and process outcomes associated with participation in the integrated model with and without financial incentives will be evaluated.

Completed12 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of a Family-based Pediatric Obesity Program: TEENS+

Pediatric Obesity

Investigators propose to pilot an adolescent obesity intervention, TEENS+, to examine the feasibility of this dietary intervention strategy and preliminary effectiveness of two models of parental involvement within adolescent obesity treatment.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Peer Counseling in Family-Based Treatment for Childhood Obesity

Childhood Obesity

To evaluate the acceptability and feasibility of peers as interventionists in delivering family-based behavioral pediatric weight control intervention.

Completed13 enrollment criteria

Effect of Mindful Eating on Body Mass Index in Obese Adolescents

Adolescent Obesity

This study is designed to study the effect of a family based mindfulness training program with special focus on diet and nutrition on weight and cardiovascular risk markers in obese adolescents.

Completed1 enrollment criteria

Healthcare Text Messaging to Improve Diet, Physical Activity and Weight Loss in a Pediatric Lipid...

Pediatric Obesity

The purpose of this study is to determine if health-related text messages sent from healthcare providers to overweight and obese adolescents enrolled at a pediatric lipid clinic will result in increased adherence to their nutrition and physical activity goals and improve their weight loss. The study will also assess if the volume of texts per week impacts outcomes.

Completed16 enrollment criteria

Effects of Group Vs. Home-Based Combined Exercise-Diet Program In Childhood Obesity: A Randomised...

Obesity

The aim of this study was to compare the effect of a hospital group-based vs. home-based combined exercise-diet program for the treatment of childhood obesity.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Motivational Interviewing for Weight Loss

Childhood Obesity

The investigators studied the effect of motivational interviewing (MI) on self-efficacy, health behaviors, and health outcomes in overweight children and adolescents (ages ranging from 10 to 18 years).

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Integrated Care for Pediatric Obesity Using Telehealth

Pediatric Obesity

Obesity is perhaps the most urgent public health crisis in pediatrics. Thus, managing childhood obesity is a top priority among pediatricians in primary care settings. However, effective treatment typically is multidisciplinary, and most practices currently do not have the infrastructure for coordinating integrated care. With the advent of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), innovative systems for building multidisciplinary teams to provide integrated care through a patient-centered medical home will be at a strategic advantage. The use of electronic technologies for delivering health-related information or services, known as telehealth, is an innovation with the potential to streamline integrated care and transform interventions for chronic diseases. We propose a pilot study to evaluate telehealth for treating pediatric obesity in collaboration with a community practice (Wareham Pediatrics). Patients aged 10 to 17 years who participate in the telehealth intervention study (N=40) will be randomly assigned to an "immediate" intervention group or a "wait list" control group. Subjects in the "immediate" intervention group will begin the 6-month telehealth intervention at the time of enrollment in the study and then receive general patient/family counseling from their primary care providers (PCPs) at routine office visits during a 6-month follow-up period. Those in the "wait list" control group will receive general patient/family counseling from their PCPs for 6 months followed by the telehealth intervention for 6 months. Thus, the total duration of participation in the study for each subject will be 12 months. The telehealth intervention will include dietary, physical activity, and behavioral management counseling provided by videoconferencing from the OWL clinical providers at Boston Children's Hospital to children in their homes, or at a telehealth station at Wareham Pediatrics.

Completed11 enrollment criteria
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