Tag: ocd

  • My Approach to Treating OCD

    My Approach to Treating OCD

    While I offer general psychotherapy for many different types of issues, such as depression and anxiety, I am also a specialist for treating OCD. For over the past two years, the majority of my caseload has consisted of clients who have OCD. I previously served on a yearlong professional consultation team focused on OCD. I have provided clinical supervision and consultation to other therapists focused on OCD. It’s a passion area of mine for a few different reasons: I was particularly interested in learning about OCD when I was a graduate student and it’s something that both my wife and I have lived experience with (she gave permission for me to share this beforehand). This past fall, I was able to attend my first clinical conference focused on OCD at the New York State Psychiatric Institute. All that to say, it’s deeply meaningful for me to be able to support people with OCD.

    To treat OCD, I use Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP or sometimes ExRP) therapy which is one of the most well-researched types of treatment for OCD. ERP is a specific type of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT). ERP supports people in a few different ways.

    First, ERP teaches people about how OCD works. Simply having more knowledge about OCD can sometimes greatly improve people’s quality of life. OCD likes to get stuck on topics or themes that often make people feel embarassed or ashamed or guilty. A lot of my clients were relieved to learn that other people with OCD have experienced similar thoughts and feelings. I worked with people who believed they were “weirdos” or “creeps” or “crazy” (or some other negative label) because of their OCD symptoms when this couldn’t be further from the truth.

    Second, ERP helps people identify what counts as an intrusive thought versus a compulsion. The intrusive thought is usually a “what if” worry that can activate a lot of stress and the compulsion is a behavior to bring relief from the intrusive thought. For example, someone with Contamination OCD might have the intrusive thought “what if the germs from touching the door never go away?” and then they do the compulsion of washing their hands 10 times in a row to get rid of the germs. This is an important part of treatment and the difference for certain people can be subtle and complex.

    Three, building on the previous step, ERP helps people increase their ability to “hang out” with distressing intrusive thoughts and allow the thoughts to be there (this is where ERP can overlap with many types of mindfulness and acceptance-based treatments and practices). It can also help people resist the urge to engage with compulsions. One of the core aspects of the treatment, which is a part of the name, is exposure. When people with OCD are doing ERP, they will engage in planned exposure exercises for their specific fears and OCD themes. So, someone with Contamination OCD might do exposures of touching many objects in public spaces to address the fear of contracting diseases or becoming contaminated with germs.

    Exposure therapy can be one of the most challenging types of therapy for anyone to do. Because people are asked to confront their greatest fears (under the careful guidance and support from a trained therapist, of course). However, I have witnessed how it can powerfully change people’s lives for the better. They can find so much more freedom and flexibility from OCD. Also, because doing exposures can be so intense,I often support clients in engaging in self-compassion and mindfulness practices to supplement the ERP treatment.

    I’ve worked with many peope with different types of OCD, and I truly feel honored for being a part of their recovery stories. It is one of the most meaningful aspects of my work!

  • Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP) for OCD

    Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP) for OCD

    One of my specialties is treating Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD) with a type of therapy called Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP). This is one of the most researched treatments for OCD. To understand how it works, you also have to know a bit about how OCD works.

    OCD is characterized by obsessions and compulsions. Obsessions are unwanted intrusive thoughts and compulsions are any action or behavior that attempts to provide relief from the obsessions. But, as people begin using compulsions, they often have to do more and more to cope with the same obsessions. I’ve worked with many people who started treatment when it felt like they were spending most of their waking hours engaged in compulsions. This left them feeling burnt out, stressed, depleted and like they didn’t have any time or energy for all the good stuff in life.

    A person without their head or face visible is washing their hands.

    The unwanted intrusive worries that characterize obsessions can usually be categorized into different themes. Here are some examples of different OCD themes:

    • Contamination OCD: you might have intense worries about germs and use compulsions like excessive hand-washing, doing the laundry several times a day, going through a bottle of hand sanitizer in a few days or less
    • Harm OCD: worries about impulsively hurting someone else or hurting oneself, blurting something inappropriate out loud, etc. Compulsions might include avoiding sharp objects, biting the tongue, staying away from subway platform edges and keeping your hands in your pocket.
    • Pedophilia OCD: intrusive thoughts that you might be a pedophile even though you really aren’t. You might have compulsions that tell you to avoid going anywhere near kids or tricks to get the thoughts to go away (which usually only works temporarily)
    • Religious/Morality OCD: worries about being immoral, doing something profane or sacriligious, having “bad thoughts” about religious figures. Compulsions might include avoiding religious practices and activities, or over-engaging in religious practices such as praying for forgiveness or mercy because of the “bad thoughts” multiple hours a day.
    • There are many more themes too!

    ERP works by helping clients approach and expose themselves to the distressing stimuli (i.e., we’re going to stand on the edge of the subway platform, we’re going to touch the inside of the public trash can). It also helps clients learn skills to decrease compulsions (this is the Response Prevention aspect of ERP). This can be one of the most challenging types of therapies for anyone to do and requires a skilled therapist trained in ERP to support clients as they seek change. While these exposures can be intense in the short term, they provide longer term freedom and flexibility from a life controlled by rigid OCD rules and compulsions.