Browsing Brage INN by Author "Romanov, Dimitry"
Now showing items 1-2 of 2
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Body dysmorphia in common skin diseases: Results of an observational, cross-sectional multi-centre study among dermatological out-patients in 17 European countries
Schut, Christina; Dalgard, Florence; Bewley, Anthony; Evers, Andrea Walburga Maria; Gieler, Uwe; Lien, Lars; Sampogna, Francesca; Ständer, Sonja; Tomas-Aragones, Lucia; Vulink, Nienke; Finlay, Andrew Y.; Legat, Franz Josef; Titeca, Geraldine; Jemec, Gregor B.; Misery, Laurent; Szabó, Csanád; Grivcheva-Panovska, Vesna; Koulil, Saskia Spillekom-van; Balieva, Flora Nicol; Szepietöwski, Jacek Cezary; Reich, Adam; Ferreira, Barbara Roque; Lvov, Andrey; Romanov, Dimitry; Marron, Servando E; Gracia-Cazana, Tamara; Svensson, Å; Altunay, Ilknur K.; Thompson, Andrew; Zeidler, Claudia; Kupfer, Joerg (Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2022)Background: Body dysmorphic disorder (BDD) is a common psychiatric disorder associated with high costs for healthcare systems as patients may repeatedly ask for different, often not effective interventions. BDD symptoms ... -
Dermatological patients with itch report more stress, stigmatization experience, anxiety and depression compared to patients without itch: Results from a European multi-centre study
Zeidler, Claudia; Kupfer, Joerg; Dalgard, Florence; Bewley, A.; Evers, Andrea W. M.; Gieler, U.; Lien, Lars; Sampogna, Francesca; Aragones, Lucia Tomas; Vulink, Nienke C.; Finlay, Andrew Y.; Legat, Franz J.; Titeca, Geraldine; Jemec, Gregor B.; Misery, Laurent; Szabo, C.; Panovska, V. Grivcheva; Spillekom van Koulil, S.; Balieva, Flora Nicol; Szepietowski, J.C.; Reich, A.; Ferreira, B. R.; Lvov, Andrey; Romanov, Dimitry; Marrón, Servando E.; Gracia Cazana, T.; Elyas, Amna; Altunay, Ilknur K.; Thompson, AR; Van Beugen, Sylvia; Ständer, S; Schut, Christina (Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2024)Background: Itch as the most common symptom in dermatology has been shown to be related to psychological factors such as stress, anxiety and depression. Moreover, associations were found between perceived stigmatization ...