Weight Status, Resilience, and Quality of Life in Indian Children

NCT05648045 · Status: COMPLETED · Type: OBSERVATIONAL · Enrollment: 720

Last updated 2026-04-29

No results posted yet for this study

Summary

A school-based cross-sectional study that aims to generate context-specific evidence on how weight status is related to resilience, health behaviour, and quality of life among Indian adolescents.

Primary Objective

To assess differences in overall resilience (total score of Adolescent Resilience score from ARQ49) between normal-weight and overweight/obese Indian adolescents aged 14-16 years.

Secondary Objectives

1. To compare differences in Adolescent Resilience Questionnaire (ARQ49) subscale scores between normal-weight and overweight/obese adolescents. The internal resilience factors assessed by the ARQ49 include confidence, emotional insight, negative cognition, social skills, empathy, and tolerance, while the external resilience factors include family connectedness, family availability, peer connectedness, peer availability, supportive school environment, school connectedness, and community connectedness.
2. To assess differences in internal resilience factors (diet self-efficacy, physical activity self-efficacy, self-esteem, and optimism) between normal-weight and overweight/obese adolescents and to examine parental nutrition knowledge as an external resilience resource and moderator in association analyses.
3. To compare dietary behaviors, physical activity patterns, and Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory (PedsQL) scores between normal-weight and overweight/obese adolescents.
4. To examine the associations among resilience, dietary and physical activity behaviors, and PedsQL within the overall sample and within different weight groups, and to evaluate parental nutrition knowledge as a moderator of the relationship between weight status and resilience or health outcomes.

Exploratory Objective
5. To explore differences in resilience, health behaviors, and PedsQL between normal-weight and underweight Indian adolescents.

Study hypotheses

The investigators hypothesized that adolescents with overweight/obesity, compared with their normal-weight peers, would demonstrate lower scores on total resilience (primary outcome), as well as on internal and external resilience indices; report lower diet self-efficacy, physical activity self-efficacy, self-esteem, and optimism; report less frequent health-promoting behaviors (including lower fruit and vegetable intake and fewer days achieving ≥ 60 min/day of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity); and report lower PedsQL scores.

Parental nutrition knowledge will not be treated as a between-group outcome; instead, it will be tested as a moderator in association analyses, examining whether parental nutrition knowledge influences the relationship between weight status and resilience or health outcomes.

Furthermore, the investigators hypothesized that higher resilience scores would be positively associated with healthier dietary behaviors, greater physical activity participation, and higher PedsQL scores across the overall sample, with these associations expected to hold true within both normal-weight and overweight/obese groups. In addition, analyses involving underweight adolescents will be exploratory and descriptive in nature. We will explore whether underweight adolescents show different levels of resilience, health behaviors, and HRQoL compared with adolescents with normal weight.

Conditions

  • Childhood Obesity
  • Overweight (BMI > 25)
  • Underweight

Sponsors & Collaborators

  • Maastricht University

    collaborator OTHER
  • Maastricht University Medical Center

    lead OTHER

Principal Investigators

  • Poulami Dasgupta · Maastricht University/MaastrichtUMC

Eligibility

Min Age
14 Years
Max Age
16 Years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
Yes

Timeline & Regulatory

Start
2023-02-20
Primary Completion
2024-02-28
Completion
2024-04-30

Countries

  • India

Study Locations

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Read the full study record

This page highlights key information. For complete eligibility criteria, study locations, investigator contacts, and the full protocol, visit the original record on ClinicalTrials.gov.

View NCT05648045 on ClinicalTrials.gov