View clinical trials related to Body Dysmorphic Disorders.
Filter by:While eating disorders in males are often overlooked, up to 7 million men in the United States will experience an eating disorder in their lifetime. Critically, men are less likely to seek treatment for an eating disorder compared to women. Therefore, prevention programs that target male-specific eating disorder risk factors prior to the development of an eating or appearance-related disorder are crucial in reducing eating disorders in this population. Preliminary work by our group established the initial efficacy of a novel program, the Body Project: More than Muscles (MTM) compared to assessment-only control. This study will replicate and extend this research by comparing MTM to a time and attention matched control used in previous eating disorder prevention work, media advocacy (MA).
The investigators are testing the efficacy of Smartphone-delivered cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) treatment for body dysmorphic disorder (BDD). The investigators hypothesize that participants receiving app-CBT will have greater improvement in BDD-YBOCS scores than those in the waitlist condition at treatment endpoint (week 12).
To examine the effectiveness and clinical care outcomes of cognitive-behavioral therapy interventions at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH).
The research project is a controlled pilot study of the efficacy of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) as an adjunct to serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SRI) pharmacotherapy in body dysmorphic disorder (BDD). This study assesses the efficacy of CBT in comparison to relaxation and stress management training (RSMT), an active control treatment