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RecruitingNCT04837586

Self-Weighing for Adolescents Seeking Obesity Treatment

Self-weighing for Weight Management in Adolescents Seeking Obesity Treatment: A Randomized Pilot

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
99 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Minnesota · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
12 Years – 17 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

99 patients age 12 to \<18 years old with obesity (BMI \>/=95th percentile), will be randomized to one of three treatment interventions: 1. Usual Care 2. Usual Care plus advice to weigh daily on simple scale 3. Usual Care plus advice to weigh-daily on an EHR-connected scale Survey data collected at baseline, 2, 4, 6, and 12-weeks, and qualitative interviews at 12 weeks, will assess acceptability, safety, self-efficacy, and BMI. Recruitment will also be assessed (% eligible patients who consent). In order to understand real-world feasibility of this intervention, the clinic staff will work with patients to connect the scales to Epic.

Detailed description

Obesity is a major public health issue because of its high prevalence and many health consequences. Obesity is driven by a dysregulation of the body's energy regulatory systems and is life-shortening. Obesity during the critical adolescent period increases risk of diabetes, cardiometabolic disease, all-cause mortality, and adulthood obesity. Rates of obesity-related cancers are increasing in younger populations. In addition to poorer health, individuals with obesity during adolescence are at risk for lower productivity, income, and likelihood of employment in adulthood, making obesity treatment and prevention important for reducing disparities. Despite consensus on the need for multi-component interventions for obesity, rates continue to climb for adolescents, youth of low-income backgrounds, and youth of racial/ethnic minority backgrounds. Clinicians cite lack of time and tools to help patients lose weight as barriers to weight counseling, and thus need practical, effective interventions they can feasibly disseminate from a busy clinical setting. Self-weighing, grounded in behavior change theory, is effective for weight loss in adults. Self-monitoring is grounded in Social Cognitive Theory (SCT), which describes behavior change as happening with reciprocal interactions with one's environment, creating external and internal self-reinforcement. Self-monitoring is one such interaction that improves self-awareness through proximate self-measurement, and improves self-efficacy, self-control, and self-reinforcement. Self-weighing (SW) is a form of self-monitoring for weight loss that is grounded in SCT. Daily SW in adults has been associated with increased exercise and cognitive restraint, and reduced snacking, television watching, and consumption of sweets. The investigator found no data on patient and parent perspectives on connecting scales to the EHR for daily weights in adolescents with obesity seeking obesity treatment. 99 patients age 12 to \<18 years old with obesity (BMI \>/=95th percentile), to be randomized to one of three treatment interventions: 1. Usual Care 2. Usual Care plus advice to weigh daily on simple scale 3. Usual Care plus advice to weigh-daily on an EHR-connected scale Survey data collected at baseline, 2, 4, 6, and 12-weeks, and qualitative interviews at 12 weeks, will assess acceptability, safety, self-efficacy, and BMI. Recruitment will also be assessed (% eligible patients who consent). In order to understand real-world feasibility of this intervention, the clinic staff will work with patients to connect the scales to Epic.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERStandard CareIndividuals will receive standard care for their obesity through the Pediatric Weight Management Clinic.
DEVICESimple ScaleIndividuals will be encouraged to perform daily weighing at home on a simple scale.
DEVICEEHR-Connected ScaleIndividuals will be encouraged to perform daily weighing at home on a Smart scale that connects to the EHR. Clinic staff will review weight entries in the EHR and provide feedback.

Timeline

Start date
2023-09-15
Primary completion
2026-05-01
Completion
2026-05-01
First posted
2021-04-08
Last updated
2025-10-07

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04837586. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

Self-Weighing for Adolescents Seeking Obesity Treatment (NCT04837586) · Clinical Trials Directory