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Clinical Trials/NCT00344747
NCT00344747
Completed
Not Applicable

Multidisciplinary Ambulatory Intervention Program (Dietary Behavioral Physical Activity) in Family of Children and Adolescents With Obesity

Soroka University Medical Center1 site in 1 country40 target enrollmentSeptember 2006
ConditionsObesity

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Obesity
Sponsor
Soroka University Medical Center
Enrollment
40
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
changes in BMI, activity level and Quality of Life questionnaire for the parents and the others children in the family
Status
Completed
Last Updated
15 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

Obesity has become a pandemic, and it is today's principal neglected public health problem.

Obesity has increased dramatically during the past two decades At adolescence, it is an aggravating issue, because obesity tends to persist in adulthood and the longer its duration, the higher the associated mortality and morbidity. Obesity imposes a heavy health and social burden, and it is widely recognized that treatment is costly. If obesity is not successfully addressed by late adolescence, the likelihood of weight loss in adulthood is as low as 5%. Therefore, prevention is crucial, and children and adolescents should be a priority target.

Treatment of obesity is costly, time consuming, difficult and the results aren't always satisfying On most cases the patients receive dietary advice only (6-10 visits per year). And usually the patients end the treatment early due to lack of results.

The best treatment of children and adolescent obesity is done in highly specialized settings, by a multidisciplinary team. Those programs have a limited number of locations (not always in proximity to the patients' residence), in addition, they are long term treatments and therefore are hard to complete successfully without additional support, Therefore only a limited number of patients can benefit from such programs.

Due to the reasons mentioned above, many families tend not to start the process of treating their obese child, or turn to commercial weight loss programs, or put their children according to their beliefs and diets.

Therefore ambulatory medicine is the ideal setting for the treatment of children and adolescent's obesity, it's also in proximity to the patients' residence, the medical team has a deep knowing of their patients and the possibility for long term maintenance and follow-up.

We propose a trial of obesity treatment by behavior modification program, including parents as agents of change.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
September 2006
End Date
August 2009
Last Updated
15 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Children (6-18 years) with BMI in the 85th to 95th percentile or higher

Exclusion Criteria

  • Children with chronic diseases treated with chronic medications.
  • Refuse to participate in to the study

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

changes in BMI, activity level and Quality of Life questionnaire for the parents and the others children in the family

Study Sites (1)

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