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Browse 2,358 clinical trials for obesity. Find studies that match your criteria and connect with research centers.
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Showing 781-800 of 2,358 trials
NCT06236906
Obesity in childhood is a global public health problem which continues to increase. It is associated with type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, certain types of cancer, decreased psycho-social health and early mortality, among many other short- and long-term consequences. In many families where a child has obesity, at least one parent also has obesity or overweight with co-morbidity. In many cases, the care for children is more structured than for adults. Family treatment aimed at making lifestyle changes for the entire family, with those with obesity also restricting their calorie intake to normalize weight, has not been tested in Sweden and on a very limited scale internationally. International studies have shown that the more frequent the contact with healthcare, the better the results, regardless of the treatment method. However, frequent contacts are challenging to implement due to significant demands on both families and healthcare. To address these challenges, the investigators aim to facilitate, improve, and optimize healthcare using a digital treatment support system involving daily home weighing and electronic communication between the clinic and families via a mobile application. The system is unique as it is based on real measurements, allowing both families and clinical staff to continuously monitor weight changes. This treatment involves fewer physical visits to the clinic but more frequent contact through the digital support system. The goal is to evaluate whether a digital-physical family treatment conducted in primary care for families with at least one adult and one child with obesity leads to sustained weight loss with fewer visits, fewer missed appointments, resulting in more cost-effective care.
NCT01167270
This study will test an intervention program designed to provide developmentally appropriate guidance to parents of infants on responsive parenting and healthy lifestyle to see if that intervention will prevent rapid weight gain in infancy and overweight at age 3 years. Further, compared with control infants, intervention infants will have lower body mass index (BMI) percentiles at age 3. The investigators also hypothesize that control infants will gain weight more rapidly over time.