Dialectal Behaviour Therapy to Enhance Health Behaviour Change for Adolescents Living With Obesity (DIRECTION Trial)
Recruiting now NCT05338944
Run by University of Manitoba · for 14 to 17 · All sexes · accepts healthy volunteers
What this study is about
This research is being conducted to evaluate emotion-focused therapy that incorporates elements of mindfulness, distress tolerance, and relationship support. The investigators want to learn if this therapy, called Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT) will help improve quality of life and weight management in youth at risk for type 2 diabetes. Individuals will be randomly assigned to weekly group based session in one of 3 intervention arms; lifestyle + DBT, lifestyle alone, or a control arm.
Who can join (things the study team will check)
✅ You may be able to join if…
- 14-17 years old
- BMI z-score >1.4
- signs of mild-moderate depression (PHQ-9 score 5-19)
- willing and able to comply with study procedures
🚫 You may not be able to join if…
- more than one health co-morbidity
- being treated with medication for obesity
- taking steroids
- currently being treated for atypical antipsychotics
- have an orthopedic injury or chronic illness that would prevent them from performing the intervention
- experienced weight loss or enrolled in weight loss program in the six months prior to the study
- they are currently and/or in the past 12 months have been prescribed any weight loss medication(s) including Ozempic
- self reported history of alcoholism or drug abuse
- history of self-harm or suicide attempts in the past 12 months
- currently enrolled in psychotherapy or DBT
- parents do not approve of you participating
- unable to read, speak and understand English as translation will not be provided
- unable/unwilling to give assent/consent
Where this trial is running
- University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada
- University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
- McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Who to contact
Jon McGavock, PhD · 204-789-3591 · jmcgavock@chrim.ca
It's completely normal to call and ask questions before deciding anything. Mention the study ID: NCT05338944.
Verify everything on the official ClinicalTrials.gov record. Page updated July 2026.