“…However, when body-and illness-related issues need to be assessed, drawings have been found to be of value. Research in patients with cardiovascular diseases (Broadbent, Ellis, Gamble, & Petrie, 2006;Reynolds, Broadbent, Ellis, Gamble, & Petrie, 2007), headache (Broadbent, Niederhoffer, Haguec, Corter, & Reynolds, 2009), brain injury (Jones et al, 2016), eating disorders (Guez, Lev-Wiesel, Valetsky, Kruszewski Sztul, & Pener, 2010) and Cushing's syndrome (Tiemensma et al, 2012) showed correlations between objective physical features of drawings of the affected body part, such as size or detail, and clinical severity, illness perception and distress. Moreover body drawings have been indicated to be sensitive to change in a small randomised controlled trial involving dance movement therapy for patients with fibromyalgia; the intervention group used more details and made larger drawings of themselves after six months of therapy than the treatment-as-usual group (Bojner Horwitz, Kowalski, Theorell & Anderberg, 2006).…”