Family-Based Mindful Eating Intervention for Overweight Adolescents
NCT ID: NCT02114190
Last Updated: 2017-08-22
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
66 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2014-04-30
2017-03-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Meditation-based programs may improve the efficacy of more established weight-loss interventions for adolescents by addressing key psychological variables affecting weight. Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) is a well-established, systematic patient-centered educational approach that uses training in mindfulness meditation to increase awareness of and the ability to respond skillfully to experiences that contribute to emotional distress and maladaptive behavior. The efficacy of MBSR in reducing psychological distress and symptoms of stress in adults has been consistently shown in controlled studies. Significant improvements in physiological measures related to metabolic syndrome including blood pressure, cholesterol, and glycemic control have also been demonstrated. Similar meditation programs have been successfully implemented with adolescents to address problems such as hypertension, depression, and eating behaviors. Furthermore, the recent expansion of mindfulness programs to include family relationships shows the immense potential for broadening the customarily individual focus of meditation-based interventions to include broader factors thought to influence adolescent health outcomes. This is important given that greater involvement of the family is thought to increase the effectiveness of interventions aimed at adolescent weight control, weight maintenance and weight loss.
Recently, researchers have begun to modify the MBSR program specifically for populations attempting to make dietary health changes. One newly modified program for adults is Mindful Eating \& Living (MEAL), a brief 6-session program designed to teach skills which can lead to increased awareness of eating, emotions, and judgment. Preliminary data from our own research with adults shows significant changes in eating behaviors and other obesity related problems, including reduced psychological distress, regulation of intake patterns, disordered eating, improved metabolic regulation, and weight loss.
Although theoretically compelling, mindful eating interventions have never been examined with an overweight adolescent population. Thus, an unprecedented opportunity exists to develop a systematic program of research investigating a mindfulness approach to eating behavior and weight loss specifically tailored for adolescents and their families. This is critical given that adolescence is a period with special developmental considerations, and it is not clear that weight loss programs developed for children or adults are effective with adolescents. Interventions aimed at adolescent eating behaviors have met with mixed success, and it has been theorized that this may be due, in part, to an inadequate understanding of the factors (e.g. psychological and family-based) associated with eating behaviors among adolescents that need to be addressed in interventions. To address these gaps, this study proposes to systematically adapt, pilot, refine, and evaluate a developmentally appropriate Mindful Eating intervention for overweight adolescents based on the current protocol format taught in the adult MEAL program. We have designed a three-phase iterative development process that includes: 1) community key informant and consultant input; 2) beta-testing and further refinement of the program; and 3) formal pilot testing. Study aims include:
Aim 1: Adapt a mindful eating intervention protocol (Mindful Eating -A) for an overweight adolescent population (BMI ≥ 85th percentile), ages 14-17. The intervention will be tailored to the unique developmental challenges of adolescence, suitable for use in applied community settings, and demonstrate feasibility and acceptability.
Aim 2: Develop a 'family enhanced mindful eating -A' (Mindful Eating -A+F) intervention protocol that integrates a family systems perspective into Mindful Eating -A. The goal is to expand the focus of Mindful Eating -A to include family factors that influence adolescent eating behaviors. These include food-related parenting styles, food organization behaviors, family support, and the parents' own eating-related behaviors. Mindful Eating -A+F will demonstrate feasibility, and acceptability, and will be suitable for use in applied community settings.
Aim 3: To examine the overall efficacy of the optimized Mindful Eating -A+F, relative to the Mindful Eating -A intervention. Within this examination, post-treatment and 3-month follow-up comparisons across the two treatment approaches will be made. Effect sizes within and between treatments will be assessed. We expect that Mindful Eating -A+F will show stronger and more enduring effects than Mindful Eating -A alone on adolescent outcomes. Primary outcomes include adolescent weight, BMI, and eating behaviors. Secondary outcomes include adolescent's markers of metabolic syndrome, psychological distress, family barriers, and mindfulness.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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Adolescent Mindful Eating Group
Adolescents will participate in a 8 week mindful eating programs tailored for adolescents.
Adolescent Mindful Eating Group
Adolescents will learn mindfulness and meditation, how to be mindful when eating, mindful yoga, how to recognize hunger cures, understand emotional eating, trigger foods and how to apply mindful eating in social situations.
Parent Intergrated Group
This intervention incorporates a family systems perspective into mindful eating interventions for adolescents. This intervention will consist of 11 sessions in an 8 week period, with sessions 2,7, and 11 incorporating family sessions. The purpose of the family sessions are to increase overall family motivation for behavior change, involve family members in identifying specific targets of change and establishing agreed upon strategies.
Parent Integrated Group
Adolescents will receive learn same techniques as adolescents in Adolescent Mindful Eating Group. The group component of the parent intervention is designed for parents only and will be run parallel to the adolescent group. The goal of these sessions is to teach parents skills to support adolescent by developing effective parenting styles, parenting skills, strategies around eating behavior change, productive problem solving, and the role of all other family members with regard to the treatment process. The last five sessions will be dedicated to teaching a slightly reduced MEAL adult protocol to allow parents to learn mindfulness skills as it applies to their own eating behaviors and affective reactivity.
Interventions
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Adolescent Mindful Eating Group
Adolescents will learn mindfulness and meditation, how to be mindful when eating, mindful yoga, how to recognize hunger cures, understand emotional eating, trigger foods and how to apply mindful eating in social situations.
Parent Integrated Group
Adolescents will receive learn same techniques as adolescents in Adolescent Mindful Eating Group. The group component of the parent intervention is designed for parents only and will be run parallel to the adolescent group. The goal of these sessions is to teach parents skills to support adolescent by developing effective parenting styles, parenting skills, strategies around eating behavior change, productive problem solving, and the role of all other family members with regard to the treatment process. The last five sessions will be dedicated to teaching a slightly reduced MEAL adult protocol to allow parents to learn mindfulness skills as it applies to their own eating behaviors and affective reactivity.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* BMI ≥ 85th percentile,
* assent from adolescent,
* consent from a parent/guardian,
* willingness of one parent/guardian living with adolescent to participate in the study,
* English speaking.
Exclusion Criteria
* previously diagnosed type 1 or type 2 diabetes,
* blood pressure in the range of stage 2 hypertension which requires medication
* treatment which interferes with outcomes related to blood pressure and glucose,
* medications that significantly interfere with weight gain such as oral steroid use greater than two consecutive weeks
* antipsychotic medications,
* participation in a standardized weight loss program within the previous 6 months,
* inability to provide informed assent,
* no parent/guardian consent,
* insufficient reading ability to comprehend the self-administered assessment instruments (approximately 5th grade reading level).
14 Years
17 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Oregon Research Institute
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Jeanne Dalen, Ph.D
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Oregon Research Institute
Locations
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ORI Center for Family and Adolescent Research
Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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