ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

OBEAT - Beating Obesity

B

Bispebjerg Hospital

Status

Completed

Conditions

Obesity, Childhood
Pregnancy Related
Stress

Treatments

Behavioral: Resilience program

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03854331
TRYG-125690

Details and patient eligibility

About

The primary objective of this trial is to study the feasibility of a resilience intervention to reduce stress and thus improve sleep, healthy diet and physical activity in normal weight pregnant women.

Initially, an exploratory study of stressors and worrying in pregnant women will be done by use of qualitative methods (focus group interviews) followed by a randomised controlled feasibility trial with a parallel qualitative process evaluation.

This project is expected to improve the understanding of the processes and feasibility of conducting a randomized intervention study to examine if improvements in chronic stress and poor sleep during pregnancy improves early weight gain and childhood risk of obesity.

Full description

Phase 1: Planning In Phase 1 (6 months), the project will be developed and planned, and approvals from the Danish Data Protection Agency and Ethical Committee of the Capital Region to conduct the study will be obtained.

Validated questionnaires to measure perceived stress, sleep patterns, physical activity- and dietary habits will be selected and pilot tested.

Phase 2: Recruitment and data collection In Phase 2 (12 months), participants will be recruited and randomized. Pregnant women living in Denmark are offered public, antenatal care delivered by hospital employed midwives. Healthy, non-obese, pregnant women assigned to antenatal care and birth at Hvidovre Hospital, are routinely invited to a first antenatal midwife session at gestational week 14-18. At these sessions, participants will be informed and recruited to the feasibility study. In 8 weeks approximately 240 pregnant women will be eligible, thus 120 women corresponding to 50% of all eligible pregnant women in one month will be recruited. In this feasibility study 50% of the women will be randomised to the intervention group and introduced to the resilience internet-based program/ smart phone app and 50% will be randomised to the control group and receive standard care. Computer-based randomization procedures will be used.

Phase 3: Feasibility study evaluation In Phase 3 (19 months), the knowledge obtained in Phase 2 will be evaluated.

An effect evaluation of the project will be conducted by analysing the collected clinical data, primarily related to changes and correlations in chronic stress in mother and infant (measured by hair cortisol), perceived stress, physical activity- and dietary habits, infant birth length and weight, and gestational age.

A process evaluation will also be conducted. The Committee of Health Education will collect data on how much and what parts of the resilience program has been used by the participating pregnant women. In addition, the participants will be asked to complete a short questionnaire on how frequent and how satisfied they have been with using the program. The researchers also want to use qualitative focus group interviews to investigate the participants' attitudes and acceptability of the proposed intervention.

The results of the effect- and process evaluations will be synthesized and will, depending on the results of the feasibility study, be implemented in a following planning of a large RCT.

Qualitative analytical methods The interview guide will be developed based on a literature search of existing literature in the field. To minimize the bias of my own influence I will consider my own experience and pre-understanding as a midwife.

The interviews will be recorded digitally and subsequently transcribed literally. The data will be analyzed using content analysis as described by Graneheim & Lundman. The purpose of the content analysis is to organize and understand the meaning of the data collected in the focus group interviews and to draw conclusions from it.

Statistical analysis The clinical outcomes will be examined using paired t-tests as well as linear or logistic regression analyses. Analyses will be done crude and adjusted for potential confounders obtained from the completed questionnaires. Results of the analyses of the clinical outcomes are expected to be underpowered due to the feasibility design of this study but will however provide estimates indicating any direction or effect size of the resilience program on this target group.

Enrollment

124 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 50 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Expecting first child
  • Speaks Danish
  • Non-obese (BMI < 30)
  • Singleton pregnancy
  • Visited to basic level midwife care

Exclusion criteria

  • Non-danish speakers
  • Type 1 or 2 diabetes
  • Visited to specialist midwife care for psychosocial reasons
  • Expecting twins
  • BMI > 30
  • Multipara

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

124 participants in 2 patient groups

Resilience program
Experimental group
Description:
The resilience program consists of different modules that are based on research on mentalization, mindfulness, parent management training, improving self-control and self-efficacy, cognitive behaviour therapy, social learning theory and neuroscience. The MyResilience program is also informed by cognitive bias modification and self-control training research. These techniques have been found to be effective in improving engagement in health behaviours and reducing symptoms and negative behaviours in clinical groups
Treatment:
Behavioral: Resilience program
Standard care
No Intervention group
Description:
Danish antenatal standard care is 3 visits at the general practitioner, 5 midwife controls and 2 ultrasound scans

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems