Background/Objective: Unwanted mental intrusions (UMIs) with contents related to Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD), Body Dysmorphic Disorder (BDD), Illness Anxiety Disorder (IAD), and Eating Disorders (EDs) are highly prevalent, independently of the cultural and/or social context. Cognitive-behavioral explanations for these disorders postulates that the escalation from common UMIs to clinically relevant symptoms depends on the maladaptive consequences (i.e., emotions, appraisals, and control strategies) of experiencing UMIs. This study examines, from a cross-cultural perspective, the cognitive-behavioral postulates of the maladaptive consequences of having UMIs. Method: Non-clinical 1,473 participants from Europe, the Middle-East, and Sou...
Objective: The Obsessive-Compulsive Spectrum consists of a group of disorders that have high comorbi...
BACKGROUND: The prevalence of obsessive-compulsive symptom dimensions and their sociodemographic and...
This paper explores how different models of eating disorders are applied to women across ethnic grou...
Background/Objective: Unwanted mental intrusions (UMIs), typically discussed in relation to Obsessiv...
Background/Objective Unwanted mental intrusions (UMIs), typically discussed in relation to Obsessive...
Background/Objective: Unwanted mental intrusions (UMIs) with contents related to ObsessiveCompulsive...
Understanding common factors between clinically different disorders: Mental intrusions in the obsess...
The present study aims to compare the unwanted intrusions experienced by obsessive–compulsive (OCD) ...
Abstract: The transdiagnostic nature of mental intrusions: A review and data-based proposal. The obj...
BackgroundThe patterns of comorbidity among mental disorders have led researchers to model the under...
Background: The patterns of comorbidity among mental disorders have led researchers to model the und...
Clinical experience and research have moved the field toward greater recognition and differentiation...
BACKGROUND: Cross-national population data from the WHO World Mental Health surveys are used to comp...
Eating disorders (ED) and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) are different clinical entities, altho...
Orthorexia Nervosa (ON) is a newly coined eating pattern which disproportionately affects Western co...
Objective: The Obsessive-Compulsive Spectrum consists of a group of disorders that have high comorbi...
BACKGROUND: The prevalence of obsessive-compulsive symptom dimensions and their sociodemographic and...
This paper explores how different models of eating disorders are applied to women across ethnic grou...
Background/Objective: Unwanted mental intrusions (UMIs), typically discussed in relation to Obsessiv...
Background/Objective Unwanted mental intrusions (UMIs), typically discussed in relation to Obsessive...
Background/Objective: Unwanted mental intrusions (UMIs) with contents related to ObsessiveCompulsive...
Understanding common factors between clinically different disorders: Mental intrusions in the obsess...
The present study aims to compare the unwanted intrusions experienced by obsessive–compulsive (OCD) ...
Abstract: The transdiagnostic nature of mental intrusions: A review and data-based proposal. The obj...
BackgroundThe patterns of comorbidity among mental disorders have led researchers to model the under...
Background: The patterns of comorbidity among mental disorders have led researchers to model the und...
Clinical experience and research have moved the field toward greater recognition and differentiation...
BACKGROUND: Cross-national population data from the WHO World Mental Health surveys are used to comp...
Eating disorders (ED) and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) are different clinical entities, altho...
Orthorexia Nervosa (ON) is a newly coined eating pattern which disproportionately affects Western co...
Objective: The Obsessive-Compulsive Spectrum consists of a group of disorders that have high comorbi...
BACKGROUND: The prevalence of obsessive-compulsive symptom dimensions and their sociodemographic and...
This paper explores how different models of eating disorders are applied to women across ethnic grou...