On This Page:ToggleExposure and Response PreventionCognitive RestructuringInference-Based CBTAcceptance Commitment TherapyMindfulnessMedicationFamily InvolvementWhat If OCD Is Not Treated?

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Treatment should aim to help you understand yourself and your OCD patterns better over time. The goal is not to eliminate triggers or discomfort entirely, but to equip you to respond skillfully when challenges inevitably arise.

There are several treatment options for OCD, including cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) with exposure response prevention (ERP), cognitive restructuring and inference-based therapy, acceptance commitment therapy (ACT) with mindfulness, self-help, and medication.

Complicating matters, there are many treatments, and the practitioners offering these interventions claim effectiveness, even when there islittle researchto support these claims. Be very cautious ofself-help advice for OCD, and make sure it is supported with scientific evidence.

A bit about OCD

OCD is a self-maintaining disorder, as the person with it naturally searches for ways to reduce anxiety as quickly as possible to minimize the chances of the perceived threat becoming a reality.

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According to theNational Institute for Health and Care Excellence, the main treatment recommended for OCD is a type of therapy called cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) (NICE, 2005). This includes three parts:

1. Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP)

Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP) Therapy is a type of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT).

The idea behindERPis to trigger your obsessive fears intentionally but not allow yourself to complete the usual compulsive behavior you would do to reduce anxiety. So you “expose” yourself to the scary situation but “prevent” the response or ritual.

The goal is to learn that even if you don’t do the compulsion, the bad thing you fear does not actually happen.

By not doing the handwashing ritual, you learn that even though it makes your anxiety sky-high at first, nothing terrible actually happens – your anxiety will peak and then start coming down naturally.

Over many repetitions, your brain learns not to fear door handles anymore.

The therapist helps you develop a fear hierarchy and graded exposure plan. They will guide you through initial ERP exercises in sessions, helping you stay with the exposure until your anxiety starts to decrease within each one.

With OCD, it’s the ‘perceived threat’ that’s generating most of the anxiety. People cannot maintain an anxious state for a long period in the absence of a threat.

How long does ERP therapy take?

The length of treatment can vary based on the severity of symptoms and your therapy process.

Some people experience benefits and changes in just a few weeks after starting ERP, whereas for others, it can take months to see an impact.

On average, ERP will require around 12-16 weeks of treatment. Each session typically lasts from 90 to 120 min and they are typically carried out weekly.

You will know you’re getting close to the end of ERP therapy when you can do exposures at the top of your hierarchy, manage the thoughts that arise, and allow your anxiety to naturally decrease.

Can ERP therapy make OCD worse?

During ERP, you will feel an initial increase in anxiety, uncertainty, and obsessional thoughts. However, this increase in symptoms is only short-term.

Overtime, you will learn that while these feelings and thoughts are distressing, they can’t hurt you.

Eventually, you will find that when you stop fighting the obsessions and anxiety, these feelings will begin to subside.

Over the last 30 years, several investigations of ERP for treating OCD have been conducted worldwide. These studies, with over 500 patients and numerous therapists, have affirmed the success and generalizability of ERP’s beneficial effects on OCD treatment (Abramowitz, 2006).

Rather than worrying about “preparing” for ERP, ask yourself – how badly is my OCD impacting my life right now, and am I willing to feel some discomfort to live a more meaningful life?

ERP is considered the gold standard treatment, but it can also become a compulsion if not practiced carefully. Any treatment approach may potentially be used compulsively.

2. Cognitive Restructuring In CBT

In CBT, cognitive restructuring involves looking at how you interpret intrusive thoughts, questioning whether your thoughts are realistic, and challenging your beliefs about responsibility, threat, importance of thoughts, need for control, etc.

Over time, building up these new balanced thought patterns helps reduce distress around intrusions and reliance on compulsions. Cognitive work can be combined with ERP for best results.

3. Inference-Based CBT

Traditional CBT for OCD focuses on identifying irrational or exaggerated thoughts and beliefs related to your obsessions, like “If I don’t wash my hands repeatedly, I’ll get sick.”

It then uses tools like logical disputation to challenge those thoughts, replace them with more rational ones, and gradually face feared situations to show that the feared outcome doesn’t happen.

The key idea is that OCD doesn’t come out of the blue. It starts with an intense feeling of doubt popping into someone’s head – doubt that something bad might happen or that something is dangerously contaminated.

This doubt feels real and urgent even though there is no actual evidence for it. The person can’t just ignore it. Where does this feeling come from then?

The treatment then identifies these reasoning tricks underlying patients’ obsessive doubts. It helps them recognize when their brain is favoring remote “maybes” instead of realistic information.

Rather than only saying “Tolerate the uncertainty,” it shows how the doubt itself was unreasonable to begin with. The goal is to prevent the obsessive doubt from arising, rather than mainly managing anxiety after it arises.

Once these doubt thought patterns are corrected, the extreme anxiety, repetitive rituals and other OCD symptoms should improve or even go away. The key is catching that initial spark of obsessional doubt where something feels dangerously uncertain or contaminated. By changing reasoning here, the later fire of full-blown OCD can be prevented.

Acceptance Commitment Therapy

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy(ACT) takes a different approach to treating obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) than traditional methods. Accepting means not judging the thoughts as good or bad, and understanding that we cannot control thoughts that arise. Here’s a basic explanation of what happens:

The ultimate goal of ACT for OCD is to live a meaningful life even with obsessions continuing to arise at times. It’s about accepting what is out of one’s control, and focusing energy on what can be controlled – chosen values and actions.

Mindfulness

Mindfulness interventionsemphasize present-moment awareness with an attitude of non-judgment. They have shown promise for improving both physical and mental health across disorders.

The mindfulness skill of non-reactivity, or allowing thoughts and feelings to come and go without reacting, may be particularly helpful for managingintrusive thoughts in OCD.

So rather than doing compulsions when obsessions occur, non-reactivity mindfulness teaches people to observe their thoughts non-judgmentally and let them fade away naturally.

This calmer, more detached response style may reduce OCD symptoms over time.

Mindfulness is a core component of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT). Here are some of the key ways mindfulness is incorporated into ACT:

Medication

Medications that increase serotonin, a brain chemical that helps regulate mood, are usually the first treatment doctors try for OCD.

Antidepressants, specifically SSRIs, which are considered the most tolerable and are, therefore, the most prescribed, are generally safe to takelong-term.

The most commonly prescribed drugs areantidepressantslike Prozac, Zoloft, and Luvox. Another medication called clomipramine also helps control OCD symptoms.

These medicines ease OCD symptoms in many patients. Treatment response is dose-related, withbetter clinical responses associated with higher dosages, although lower doses.

The choice of medication regimen is still based on trial and error. In the future, genetic testing may allow doctors to predict the best drug for each patient. But those personalized tests aren’t ready for routine medical use yet.

But 40-60% of people don’t respond well enough to the medications alone. In these cases, doctors might add other drugs like risperidone or aripiprazole, which are normally used to treat schizophrenia. Adding these medications often helps control OCD when the antidepressant drugs haven’t worked.

Family Involvement

Family and friends often shape our views about our mental health difficulties and whether we should pursue treatment.

Family members who criticize you or your symptoms may unintentionally be making your OCD worse. Criticism is linked to more severe OCD symptoms.

Critical family members often think you have more control over your obsessions and compulsions than you do. They may believe you could stop the OCD if you tried harder. This could lead them to have more negative attitudes about you seeking treatment.

It’s also common forfamily members to accommodate your OCD symptoms, like participating in compulsions or modifying family routines. They may do this to reduce your distress or their own anxiety. However, high levels of accommodation can increase family stress.

Family members who accommodate a lot may think exposure therapy will be too hard for you. The high stress may also motivate them to encourage you to get treatment.

The critical and accommodating behaviors that family members show, while often well-intentioned, can fuel OCD and create concerns about treatment.

If you choose to include family in your treatment, addressing these behaviors and treatment worries early on will be important. This can create a more supportive environment and improve your treatment success.

What If OCD Is Not Treated?

Here’s a quick summary of what can happen if OCD goes untreated:

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Olivia Guy-Evans, MSc

BSc (Hons) Psychology, MSc Psychology of Education

Olivia Guy-Evans is a writer and associate editor for Simply Psychology. She has previously worked in healthcare and educational sectors.

Saul McLeod, PhD

BSc (Hons) Psychology, MRes, PhD, University of Manchester

Saul McLeod, PhD., is a qualified psychology teacher with over 18 years of experience in further and higher education. He has been published in peer-reviewed journals, including the Journal of Clinical Psychology.