Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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TERMINATED
NA
80 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2013-11-30
2015-09-30
Brief Summary
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Primary Aim: To test the hypothesis that Healthy Weight will significantly reduce increases in BMI, % body fat, and risk for onset of obesity during follow-up.
Secondary Aim: To test the hypothesis that Healthy Weight will significantly reduce body dissatisfaction, depressive symptoms, and eating disorder symptoms.
NOTE: THIS STUDY IS ONLY OPEN TO PATIENTS AT THE MOUNT SINAI ADOLESCENT HEALTH CENTER
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Detailed Description
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In 2010, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) issued recommendations for screening and treating childhood and adolescent obesity. They endorsed comprehensive moderate-to high intensity programs including counseling for weight loss, healthy diet, and physical activity as well as instruction and support for the use of behavioral management techniques including self-monitoring, stimulus control, eating management, contingency management, and cognitive behavioral therapy techniques. The USPSTF further defined moderate- to high-intensity programs as \> 25 hr of contact and states that "such interventions would not be feasible for implementation in a primary care setting." (USPSTF, 2010, p. 365). Further, they assert that less intensive (\< 25 contact hours) programs do not produce significant improvements. "Low-intensity interventions, defined as \< 25 contact hours over a 6-month period, did not result in significant improvement in weight status" (USPSTF, 2010, p. 364). The implication is that, since most centers cannot provide this level of service, it is not worthwhile for adolescent health centers to provide any kind of obesity intervention at all. According to the USPSTF's website, "its recommendations are considered the gold standard for clinical preventive services." Such recommendations could discourage the testing and implementation of brief interventions designed to prevent obesity. Thus, to refute USPSTF statement, we propose to show that a 6-hr intervention led by graduate students can produce significant reductions in risk for both obesity and eating disorders, suggesting that this brief and inexpensive intervention could and should be rolled out nationwide.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
PREVENTION
DOUBLE
Study Groups
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Healthy Weight
intervention four times per week and consist of approximately 10 participants.
Healthy Weight
The PI will train 4 group leaders to deliver the intervention. Groups will be offered four times per week and consist of approximately 10 participants. Each group will be led by 2 group leaders and each group leader will lead two sessions per week during the 2.5 mo intervention period. Group leaders will digitally video-record all sessions of the first two groups they deliver so the PI can provide supervision and rate fidelity and competence for a random selection of 6 of these 12 sessions. Group leaders will transmit the video recordings via an encrypted, secure internet connection to Dr. Ochner (who was trained by Dr. Eric Stice, the creator of the intervention) within 3 d for supervision, and competence and fidelity assessments.
Controlled Intervention
Participants will be given a copy of the DVD. They will also be given the choice to stream it free on the web.
Controlled Intervention
"The Weight of the World" is a 51 min documentary focusing on the topics of obesity and healthy living. Via information presented by medical professionals and lifestyle experts, this film delves into issues related to preventing and combating obesity. Major topics include the importance of healthy eating and exercise behaviors and the changes that can be made by communities to reshape our lifestyles. Participants will be given a copy of the DVD. They will also be given the choice to stream it free on the web.
Interventions
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Healthy Weight
The PI will train 4 group leaders to deliver the intervention. Groups will be offered four times per week and consist of approximately 10 participants. Each group will be led by 2 group leaders and each group leader will lead two sessions per week during the 2.5 mo intervention period. Group leaders will digitally video-record all sessions of the first two groups they deliver so the PI can provide supervision and rate fidelity and competence for a random selection of 6 of these 12 sessions. Group leaders will transmit the video recordings via an encrypted, secure internet connection to Dr. Ochner (who was trained by Dr. Eric Stice, the creator of the intervention) within 3 d for supervision, and competence and fidelity assessments.
Controlled Intervention
"The Weight of the World" is a 51 min documentary focusing on the topics of obesity and healthy living. Via information presented by medical professionals and lifestyle experts, this film delves into issues related to preventing and combating obesity. Major topics include the importance of healthy eating and exercise behaviors and the changes that can be made by communities to reshape our lifestyles. Participants will be given a copy of the DVD. They will also be given the choice to stream it free on the web.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Body image concerns
* Sub-threshold Eating disorder symptomatology
* Overweight but not obese (BMI between the 85th and 95th percentile for children/adolescents and BMI between 25 and 30 kg/m2 for adults 21-24)
* Be able to commit to weekly 1-hour sessions for six weeks and 3 separate assessment visits to the MSAHC
Exclusion Criteria
* absence of body image concerns
* normal or obese body weight (\< 85th or ≥ 95th BMI percentile)
12 Years
24 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Christopher Ochner, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Locations
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Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
New York, New York, United States
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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GCO 13-0765
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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