View clinical trials related to Body Image Disturbance.
Filter by:The aim of this project is to improve the evidence-base regarding lifestyle and mental health symptoms among fitness instructors. A national cohort of fitness instructors will be invited to participate in this study by responding to an online questionnaire. The questionnaire will consist of items regarding exercise, nutrition, eating disorders, the menstrual cycle, depression, anxiety, body dissatisfaction and satisfaction, drive for muscularity and leanness, and experiences of sexual harassment. Findings from this study will provide an evidence-base for initiatives to improve/optimize mental health among fitness instructors, and also in the process of developing fitness centres to a core partner in public health and health promotion work.
The current project aims to examine the concept of promoting attention toward body functionality and gratitude using a weekly functionality-based mirror exposure and body functionality gratitude "journaling" text prompts three days a week for three weeks to examine whether this helps foster positive body image and decrease eating disorder symptoms in a sample of undergraduate females, a population at particularly high risk of body image dissatisfaction and consequent eating disorder development.
The objective of this research study is two-fold, 1) to determine if body composition and body image perception are affected through the different phases of the menstrual cycle, and 2) if an acute session of resistance training can have different effects depending on the menstrual cycle phase.
This study will evaluate whether a time-limited cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) intervention in the post-treatment time period can address body image disturbance (BID) in patients with surgically-treated head and neck cancer (HNC), thereby improving BID and quality of life (QOL).
A phase II prospective, randomized control trial assessing the impact of "invisible ink" ultra-violet (UV) tattoo ink versus conventional black tattoo ink for radiotherapy treatment localization on the quality of life of breast cancer patients undergoing adjuvant radiotherapy. The effect of tattoo type on quality of life will be measured objectively using the externally validated body-image satisfaction (BIS) scale as the primary outcome of interest, with secondary endpoints including: accuracy/reproducibility of radiotherapy setup using the invisible ink tattoos, resource impact requirements, and clinical feasibility. A sample size of 60 patients is planned (30 per study arm) with an anticipated accrual period of 18 months.
The purpose of this study is to develop and test counseling strategies for men who have sex with men (MSM) who are living with HIV and are experiencing body dissatisfaction. Two phases will be conducted throughout the course of the study. Phase 1: Develop an intervention for HIV-infected MSM that addresses body dissatisfaction and self-care. (NOTE: currently, only Phase 1 will be recruiting participants, Phase 2 will not be active for several months) Because of the prospective syndemic relationship between body dissatisfaction and depression, the investigator will integrate the most efficacious interventions for body dissatisfaction, depression, adherence, and sexual risk reduction, and tailor them to HIV-infected MSM. The investigator will then conduct an iterative process of pilots and exit interviews about feasibility, acceptability, and the strengths and weaknesses of the intervention until the intervention is maximized. Up to 9 participants will be involved in Phase 1. Phase 2: Conduct a two-arm randomized control trial comparing the newly developed intervention to a treatment-as-usual condition. As a first step in addressing the efficacy of the newly developed intervention, the investigator plans on randomizing up to 60 participants into either the newly-developed intervention or a treatment-as-usual condition. Participants will be assessed at baseline, 3 months (acute outcome), and 6 months postrandomization. The primary outcome variable is body image disturbance. Depression, HIV sexual transmission risk behaviors, and highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) adherence will serve as secondary outcomes. Study hypotheses for the two phases include: 1. The investigator will be able to develop and implement a feasible intervention that integrates addressing and relieving body dissatisfaction with increasing health related behavior change in MSM with HIV. Adequate recruitment (at least 80% of goal) and retention (at least 80% to follow up) in the trial will be an indicator of success for this aim. 2. Those who receive the intervention will show improvements in health behavior outcomes (medication adherence, HIV transmission risk behavior) and will show reduced body dissatisfaction and depressive symptoms.