CI

At a glance

ClinicalIndex Comparison Record
N/ACompleted· 49 enrolled
Drug / intervention
Mindfulnessbehavioral
Likely dose
Not stated in record
Structured eligibility isn't available for this trial yet — see the full criteria in the Eligibility tab below.

Standardized by ClinicalIndex from the ClinicalTrials.gov record · verify against the source.

Search/NCT05347914
NCT05347914N/ACompleted

Mobile Mindfulness Intervention to Reduce Non-Homeostatic Food Cravings in Emotional Eaters: Research Pilot

McGill University·interventional·Posted Apr 26, 2022·Updated Oct 18, 2023

In Brief

A clinical study evaluating Mindfulness for Emotional Eating. Completed, enrolled 49 participants across 2 sites.

Detailed Summary

More than half of Canadian are overweight or obese and over fifty percent of individuals who are obese are emotional eaters. Emotional eating is defined as the tendency to eat in response to negative emotions and can be understood as reward-based eating behavior that is reinforced by modern obesogenic environments. Over time, food-related cues can interfere with reward-based learning processes such that an individual develops a conditioned response to eat for reasons that are not associated with physiological hunger. Mindfulness has the potential to act on the reward-base habit loop of emotional eating. One potential target is cravings or the urges to eat. This can be targeted using the mindfulness exercise called "RAIN" which calls for individuals to (1) Recognize and name their craving, to (2) Acknowledge its presence and to give it space to "be"; (3) then Investigate and bring an attitude of curiosity to their experience - Where did these feelings comes from? Have I felt this way before? then (4) Not-identify with your experience- that is, remind yourself that although your craving or urge to eat is very powerful, it only makes up a small part of who you are. The aim of the study is to therefore test a pilot intervention that implements a targeted mindfulness-based exercise (RAIN), using a mobile app, to attenuate the relationship between feeling a negative internal state (affect) and eating.

Study Details

Study Typeinterventional
Allocation--
Masking--
Primary Purpose--
CountriesCanada
Collaborators--

Timeline

N/ACompletedFinished
2023202420252026
First PostedApr 26, 2022
Enrollment StartJun 1, 2022
Primary CompletionAug 28, 2023
TodayJul 2, 2026
Enrollment to primary: 1.2 yearsPosted 4.2 years ago

Interventions

Mindfulnessbehavioral

Participants will be taught a mindfulness exercise and will be instructed to use this exercise (following a mobile app) whenever they experience a food craving to eat for non-homeostatic reasons.