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NCT03601663COMPLETEDanonymous

Exploring the Effect of an eHealth Intervention on Women's Physical Activity Behaviour

Sponsor

Source record

University of Ottawa

Phase

Source record

Not applicable; this is a pilot study and does not fall under traditional clinical trial phases.

Modality

AI-normalized

behavioral intervention

Target

AI-normalized

Not applicable; the study focuses on behavioral interventions rather than a specific molecular or mechanistic target.

Indication / condition

AI-normalized

Physical Activity

Intervention

Source record

Physical Activity Information, Physical Activity Monitoring, Autonomy-support

Source & freshness

Source record

NCT ID

NCT03601663

Original source

ClinicalTrials.gov

Source last updated

Mar 24, 2020

Ingested at

Jun 12, 2026

Internal sync

Jun 12, 2026

Model version

trialsignal-ai-v1

Normalized confidence

96%

Validation status

validated

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View original source fields

NCT ID

NCT03601663

Title

Exploring the Effect of an eHealth Intervention on Women's Physical Activity Behaviour

Sponsor

University of Ottawa

Status

COMPLETED

Phase

Not applicable; this is a pilot study and does not fall under traditional clinical trial phases.

Condition raw

Physical Activity

Condition normalized

Physical Activity

Modality raw

behavioral intervention

Modality normalized

behavioral intervention

Target raw

Not applicable; the study focuses on behavioral interventions rather than a specific molecular or mechanistic target.

Target normalized

Not applicable; the study focuses on behavioral interventions rather than a specific molecular or mechanistic target.

Interventions

Physical Activity Information, Physical Activity Monitoring, Autonomy-support

Public preview

Source record

The University of Ottawa's pilot study explores the efficacy of an eHealth intervention aimed at increasing physical activity among overweight or obese women aged 18-65. Given the rising prevalence of obesity and associated chronic diseases, this intervention addresses a significant public health concern. The integration of wearable technology with autonomy-supportive behavioral strategies may offer a novel approach to enhancing physical activity levels in this demographic. The findings could inform future commercial applications in health tech, particularly in developing targeted interventions for women's health. Competitively, this study positions the University of Ottawa within the growing market of digital health solutions, emphasizing the importance of personalized and supportive health interventions. Diligence implications include assessing the scalability of the intervention and potential partnerships with wearable technology companies.

AI-generated analysis supports research triage only. Verify source records, publications, sponsor disclosures and IP databases before making diligence decisions. Model: trialsignal-ai-v1.

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