High Blood Pressure in Infants Clinical Trials

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Effectiveness of Interventions to Promote Physical Activity During Pregnancy

Status: Recruiting
Location: See location...
Intervention Type: Behavioral
Study Type: Interventional
Study Phase: Not Applicable
SUMMARY

Pregnant women are more sedentary (sit, recline, lie down more) on average than non-pregnant women (more than 12 versus less than 8 waking sedentary hours/day). Sedentary behavior has been related to psychological distress, pregnancy weight gain, impaired sleep and very large size infants, while adequate physical activity has been found to improve mental health, decrease risk of high blood pressure in pregnancy and lower risk of preterm birth infants (less than 37 weeks gestation). Decreased sedentary behavior and increased physical activity may be crucial and neglected lifestyle behavior changes that can be promoted to reduce these and other maternal health and birth outcome problems among pregnant women.

Eligibility
Participation Requirements
Sex: Female
Minimum Age: 18
Maximum Age: 45
Healthy Volunteers: f
View:

⁃ Eligibility Criteria

• 18 to 45 years old

• speak English

• 8 to 12 weeks pregnant (gestation)

• singleton pregnancy (no twins or more)

• self-report less than 150 minutes/week of moderate-intensity physical activity

• have or are willing to identify a physical activity partner

• have a cell phone with the capacity for Fitbit application (app.); secure transmission of Fitbit data; receive coaching text messages or, if not, a computer they can use to synch the fitbit, send data, and receive email messages in lieu of texts.

Locations
United States
Florida
Orlando Health
RECRUITING
Orlando
Contact Information
Primary
Jean W Davis, PhD,DNP,EdD
jean.davis@ucf.edu
1-800-208-4545
Backup
Carmen Giurgescu UCF College of Nursing ADR, PhD
carmen.giurgescu@ucf.edu
800-208-4545
Time Frame
Start Date: 2026-02-01
Estimated Completion Date: 2027-08-31
Participants
Target number of participants: 60
Treatments
Experimental: Sit Less, Move More (SLMM) program intervention
Health Coaching sessions and text messages; Fitbit sedentary time disruption, monitoring, self-regulation, exercise with a partner most days of the week to ACOG opinion 804 recommended physical activity
Sponsors
Collaborators: National Institutes of Health (NIH), Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)
Leads: University of Central Florida

This content was sourced from clinicaltrials.gov