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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT07315763
NA

Group Skills Training for Body Awareness and Managing Emotions

Sponsor: Royal Holloway University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The goal of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of a skills training group informed by polyvagal theory, when delivered in an NHS setting, for those living with obesity. Polyvagal Theory in Therapy encourages individuals to be curious, respect how their nervous system works, and notice and respond to bodily sensations. Research shows that interoception, which is the ability to sense and understand what is happening inside the body such as recognising hunger, pain, or emotions, may be challenging for people in larger bodies. These challenges have been connected to difficulties in managing emotions which may lead to behaviours such as emotional eating. This points to the need for a therapeutic approach that helps people both notice what's happening in their bodies and trust those signals enough to be able to respond in healthy ways. This project will test whether a novel polyvagal informed skills training group can improve body awareness (interoception) and emotional regulation for people within an NHS specialist weight management service using a single case experimental design. Participants will be randomly assigned a baseline period of either 14 or 21 (phase A of the design) using computer-generated randomisation. During this phase, participants will complete outcome measures. The skills training intervention phase (phase B) will begin immediately following the individual's baseline period. The intervention is the six session group polyvagal theory-informed skills training. A four-week follow-up period will follow the skills training group, during which participants will continue to complete the same outcome measures they had used in the first two phases. This phase will help assess whether immediate treatment gains are maintained and/or whether delayed treatment gains occur. Trend analysis within this phase will show whether improvement or decline occurs post-skills training.

Official title: Polyvagal Informed Group Skills Training for Body Awareness and Managing Emotions for People Living With Obesity

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 65 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

10

Start Date

2026-01-27

Completion Date

2026-09-30

Last Updated

2026-01-07

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Polyvagal informed skills training group

Research has found a connection between obesity and challenges in managing emotions, including emotional eating (Fernandes et al., 2018; Willem et al., 2019; Konttinen et al., 2019). There is currently a lack of treatments designed to address these issues whilst also promoting a curious and accepting relationship with the body. This may be particularly important for this group who may have a history of dieting or experience internalised stigma which can create a disconnect between the person and their body, a factor that many existing approaches fail to address, even though it is known to negatively impact health (Puhl et al., 2020). This study aligns with recent shifts in health policy, which move away from focusing solely on weight loss and instead prioritise non-weight-related health outcomes (Hunger et al., 2020). This group skills training, based on Polyvagal Theory (Porges, 1995), is designed to meet these needs.

Locations (1)

Ashford and St Peter's Hospital NHS Foundation Trust

Ashford, Surrey, United Kingdom