The purpose of this study is to evaluate whether the Noom Healthy Weight Program, a digital behavior change weight loss intervention, creates a positive relationship with food, compared to a waitlist control group.
This is a prospective randomized, controlled pilot study evaluating relationships towards food in overweight and obese Noom Healthy Weight participants. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of two conditions (intervention, waitlist control). In the intervention condition, participants will have immediate access to the full Noom program after consenting to Noom's Research Policy, which states the collection of in app user data for research purposes. In the waitlist control condition, participants will be informed that they are on a waiting list and will be provided access to the full Noom program after 4 months after consenting to Noom's Research Policy. Noom will have access to participants' username and email address. Before the start of the program, participants in both conditions will be emailed a survey containing the validated questionnaires mentioned below. The survey will also ask for demographic information such as race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status. Survey responses will be linked to weight data by email address, but all data will be de-identified prior to analysis. The same survey, without demographic questions, will be sent to participants again at program end (4 months). The intervention consists of a curriculum, provided through daily articles that users are encouraged to read; logging features for weight, meals, and physical activity; in-app groups; and a virtual coach, who will communicate with participants via in-app messaging. During the first week of the study, participants will be introduced to the program, the Noom app, and their coach. Coaches will use a secure dashboard to monitor patient progress, which is used to increase engagement and motivation. Participants are encouraged to log their weight and physical activity on a weekly basis, and meals daily. The primary outcome of this study is to assess self-reported eating behaviors via the Three Factor Eating Questionnaire following a 4 month weight loss intervention (Noom Healthy Weight program). Secondary outcomes assessing disordered eating habits and mindfulness will be measured via the Disordered Eating Attitude Questionnaire and the Mindful Eating Scale. Mean weight loss differences between groups will also be measured.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
160
The intervention consists of a curriculum, provided through daily articles that users are encouraged to read; logging features for weight, meals, and physical activity; in-app groups; and a virtual coach, who will communicate with participants via in-app messaging. During the first week of the study, participants will be introduced to the program, the Noom app, and their coach. Coaches will use a secure dashboard to monitor patient progress, which is used to increase engagement and motivation. Participants are encouraged to log their weight and physical activity on a weekly basis, and meals daily.
Noom, Inc.
New York, New York, United States
Self-reported eating behaviors via the Three Factor Eating Questionnaire
The primary outcome of this study is to assess self-reported eating behaviors via the Three Factor Eating Questionnaire following a weight loss intervention This assessment is designed to measure 3 dimensions of human eating behavior: cognitive restraint of eating (Factor I - 20 items), disinhibition (Factor II - 16 items), and hunger (Factor III - 15 items). The minimum score for factors I-II-III is therefore 0-0-0, and maximum possible score is 20-16-15. Part I includes items 1-36 and are rated either 1-True or 0-False. Part II includes items 37-51 and is rated on a 4-point scale with the exception of item 50, which is rated on a 6-point scale. Higher scores reflective of higher restraint,
Time frame: 4 months
Self reported disordered eating habits via the Disordered Eating Attitude Questionnaire
A 25-item questionnaire that assesses the individual's eating attitudes.
Time frame: 4 months
Self reported mindful eating habits via the Mindful Eating Scale
self-report scale to measure mindfulness with respect to eating behaviors
Time frame: 4 months
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