Self-help for body-focused repetitive behaviors: A randomized controlled trial

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Self-help for body-focused repetitive behaviors: A randomized controlled trial. / Schmotz, Stella; Weidinger, Sarah; Markov, V; Penney, Danielle; Moritz, Steffen.

In: J OBSESS-COMPULS REL, Vol. 38, 2023, p. 100810.

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@article{040bcd92d2564d3b882a3f8466e2f4ef,
title = "Self-help for body-focused repetitive behaviors: A randomized controlled trial",
abstract = "Body-focused repetitive behaviors (BFRBs) are frequent but under-treated psychological disorders. The present study examined efficacy of three behavioral self-help techniques to reduce BFRBs: habit reversal training (HRT), decoupling (DC), and decoupling in sensu (DC-is). A total of 391 participants with BFRBs were randomly assigned to either HRT, DC, DC-is, or to a waitlist control group (WLC). After six weeks, a post assessment was conducted. The Generic Body-Focused Repetitive Behavior Scale-36 (GBS-36) served as the primary outcome. There were significant main effects for improvement in BFRB and depressive symptomatology over time, regardless of group assignment. For all GBS-36 scales, treatment groups showed greater improvement than WLC. DC and DC-is consistently showed greater improvements compared to WLC. According to moderator analyses individuals with more severe symptoms in the HRT and DC-is conditions benefited to a greater extent compared to WLC in terms of BFRB symptomatology. Also, individuals in DC condition with more severe depressive symptomatology showed a better outcome compared to HRT and WLC. Moreover, individuals with trichotillomania benefited more from DC or DC-is than from HRT. Subjective ratings of the techniques were satisfactory and comparable across groups, with DC-is receiving slightly lower subjective ratings. Future research should address the effects of the techniques when combined with psychotherapy. Also, long-term effects should be evaluated.",
author = "Stella Schmotz and Sarah Weidinger and V Markov and Danielle Penney and Steffen Moritz",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1016/j.jocrd.2023.100810",
language = "English",
volume = "38",
pages = "100810",
journal = "J OBSESS-COMPULS REL",
issn = "2211-3649",
publisher = "ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Self-help for body-focused repetitive behaviors: A randomized controlled trial

AU - Schmotz, Stella

AU - Weidinger, Sarah

AU - Markov, V

AU - Penney, Danielle

AU - Moritz, Steffen

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Body-focused repetitive behaviors (BFRBs) are frequent but under-treated psychological disorders. The present study examined efficacy of three behavioral self-help techniques to reduce BFRBs: habit reversal training (HRT), decoupling (DC), and decoupling in sensu (DC-is). A total of 391 participants with BFRBs were randomly assigned to either HRT, DC, DC-is, or to a waitlist control group (WLC). After six weeks, a post assessment was conducted. The Generic Body-Focused Repetitive Behavior Scale-36 (GBS-36) served as the primary outcome. There were significant main effects for improvement in BFRB and depressive symptomatology over time, regardless of group assignment. For all GBS-36 scales, treatment groups showed greater improvement than WLC. DC and DC-is consistently showed greater improvements compared to WLC. According to moderator analyses individuals with more severe symptoms in the HRT and DC-is conditions benefited to a greater extent compared to WLC in terms of BFRB symptomatology. Also, individuals in DC condition with more severe depressive symptomatology showed a better outcome compared to HRT and WLC. Moreover, individuals with trichotillomania benefited more from DC or DC-is than from HRT. Subjective ratings of the techniques were satisfactory and comparable across groups, with DC-is receiving slightly lower subjective ratings. Future research should address the effects of the techniques when combined with psychotherapy. Also, long-term effects should be evaluated.

AB - Body-focused repetitive behaviors (BFRBs) are frequent but under-treated psychological disorders. The present study examined efficacy of three behavioral self-help techniques to reduce BFRBs: habit reversal training (HRT), decoupling (DC), and decoupling in sensu (DC-is). A total of 391 participants with BFRBs were randomly assigned to either HRT, DC, DC-is, or to a waitlist control group (WLC). After six weeks, a post assessment was conducted. The Generic Body-Focused Repetitive Behavior Scale-36 (GBS-36) served as the primary outcome. There were significant main effects for improvement in BFRB and depressive symptomatology over time, regardless of group assignment. For all GBS-36 scales, treatment groups showed greater improvement than WLC. DC and DC-is consistently showed greater improvements compared to WLC. According to moderator analyses individuals with more severe symptoms in the HRT and DC-is conditions benefited to a greater extent compared to WLC in terms of BFRB symptomatology. Also, individuals in DC condition with more severe depressive symptomatology showed a better outcome compared to HRT and WLC. Moreover, individuals with trichotillomania benefited more from DC or DC-is than from HRT. Subjective ratings of the techniques were satisfactory and comparable across groups, with DC-is receiving slightly lower subjective ratings. Future research should address the effects of the techniques when combined with psychotherapy. Also, long-term effects should be evaluated.

U2 - 10.1016/j.jocrd.2023.100810

DO - 10.1016/j.jocrd.2023.100810

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

VL - 38

SP - 100810

JO - J OBSESS-COMPULS REL

JF - J OBSESS-COMPULS REL

SN - 2211-3649

ER -