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This is a pre-post intervention study designed to evaluate the feasibility of a self-applied weight management intervention based on portion control. A total of 40 healthy volunteers with overweight/obesity will take part in a 6-month intervention featuring 4 components: a portion control toolset; a manual including instructions for the use of the tools, dietary and activity recommendations, and behavioural strategies; a mobile app to motivate intervention engagement; and biweekly telephone support. The primary outcome will be Intervention adherence, assessed as the change in dietary energy density, meal nutrient composition and utilization of intervention components from start to end of trial. Other measurements (at baseline, 3 and 6 months from baseline) will include body composition, fasting biochemical parameters, inhibitory control, eating behaviour, portions size norms and acceptance of the intervention.
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According to recent meta-analyses, portion control tools represent an acceptable and potentially effective strategy to aid in weight loss. However, how well these tools work depends on their consistent use and a good integration with other lifestyle modification strategies around body weight control and overall health. The present pilot study was designed to evaluate the feasibility of a self-applied weight management intervention based on portion control and to identify factors influencing adherence. The sample will consist of 40 healthy volunteers with overweight/obesity who will engage in a pre-post intervetion study lasting six-months. The intervetion will include four components: (1) a portion control toolkit (serving spoon and oil dispenser); (2) a phsyical manual with instructions for using the tools, dietary and physical activity recommendations, and strategies to build habits and improve mental wellbeing; (3) a mobile app to motivate intervention engagement; and (4) biweekly short telephone support. Adherence to the intervention will be the primary outcome, assessed on a fortnightly basis as the change from baseline in dietary energy density and change in meal nutrient composition plus frequency of using the intervention components. Other measurements that will be taken at baseline, 3 and 6 months from baseline, will be: body composition, fasting biochemical parameters, inhibitory control (only baseline and 6 months), eating behaviour, portion size norms and intervention acceptance. After 3 months of taking part in the intervention, a subset of the sample will participate in a nominal group session aimed at identifying barriers to intervention adherence and strategies to overcome them. The study results will inform the design of a full-scale controlled trial featuring the most successful components.
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40 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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