Obsessive Compulsive
Disorder (OCD)
An Introduction
      Prepared by Turfa Ahmed, 2nd year M.Phil. Clinical Psychology trainee, CPCUC
An Overview
 John Moore (1691), Bishop of Norwich, England, described an individual obsessed
  by
    “naughty, and sometimes blasphemous thoughts that start in their minds, while they are
     exercised in the worship of God, despite all their endeavors to stifle and suppress them…
     the more they struggle with them, the more they increase…”
 In The anatomy of melancholy, by Robert Burton (1883), an individual is described
    “who dared not go over a bridge, come near a pool, rock, steep hill, lie in a chamber
     where cross beams were, for fear he may be tempted to hang, drawn or precipitate
     himself…. he [was] afraid he shall speak aloud … something indecent, unfit to be said”
❑ Esquirol (1838) described OCD as a “monomania,”
   “chained to actions that neither reason nor emotion have originated, that
conscience rejects, and will cannot suppress.”
❑ Morel (1860 & 1866) described OCD as a disease of the autonomic nervous system
  and called it “délire émotif,” a neurosis.
❑ Pierre Janet (1903) described how obsessions and compulsions develop over three
  phases: initially characterized by a “psychasthenic” state (indecisiveness, need for
  perfectionism and orderliness, and restricted emotional expression); followed by a
  stage of “forced agitations” (need for symmetry, repeating, and checking); and,
  finally, manifestations of frank obsessions and compulsions (aggressive, religious
  and sexual themes).
❑ Freud described the famous case of Rat Man and popularized psychoanalytic
  explanations and therapy for OCD.
 The essential features of OCD are the repeated occurrence of
  personally distressing or functionally impairing obsessions and/or
  compulsions (APA, 2013).
   Obsessions are unwanted, unacceptable, and repetitive intrusive thoughts,
    images, or urges that are resisted and generally produce distress even though
    the person may recognize that the thoughts are excessive or senseless
    (Rachman, 1985).
   Compulsions are repetitive behaviors or mental acts associated with a
    subjective urgency whose aim is to prevent a dreaded outcome or reduce
    distress normally caused by an obsession.
Most common
obsessions
        Obsession                                                                 Compulsion
 FEAR of CONTAMINATION . . . . . . . . . . ................................. . .Washing/cleaning
 FEAR of HARM, ILLNESS or DEATH . . . . . ................................. . .Checking
 FEAR of VIOLATING RELIGIOUS RULES (SCRUPULOSITY)............Praying
 NEED for SYMMETRY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Arranging or “evening up”
 NEED for PERFECTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .Seeking reassurance
 NEED to HAVE SOMETHING “JUST RIGHT”. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...... .Repeating
 FEAR of DISCARDING SOMETHING IMPORTANT . . . . . . . . . .......Hoarding
 The Defining Features of Obsessions
Intrusiveness           The thought, image, or impulse repeatedly enters consciousness in
                        an unintended, involuntary manner; that is, it occurs against one’s
                        will.
Unacceptability         The extent that a repetitive intrusive thought is considered unwanted
                        or undesired or engenders disapproval.
Subjective resistance   A strong urge to resist, suppress, dismiss, or prevent the obsession
                        through avoidance, mental control strategies, or compulsive rituals.
Perceived               An evaluation of diminished control over the obsession that is
uncontrollability       considered unacceptable and threatening.
Differences in compulsions
         Compulsive cleaning                      Compulsive checking
 stronger phobic component involving    doubting and indecision with active
  escape.                                 avoidance behavior.
                                         took longer to complete, had a slow
                                          onset, evoked more internal resistance,
                                          and were more often accompanied by
                                          feelings of anger or tension.
                                         more difficulty obtaining the required
                                          certainty or assurance that the possible
                                          negative future event had been averted
                                                 Reference: Rachman and Hodgson (1980)
   Diagnostic classification differences
                        DSM 5                                             ICD 10
 the presence of either obsessions or compulsions     OCD can present with obsessions or compulsions or
  or both.                                              both.
 required to be timeconsuming (e.g. taking more       the obsessional symptoms or compulsive acts must
  than 1 hour daily)                                    be present on most days for at least 2 successive
                                                        weeks
 cause clinically significant distress and/ or
  impairment in social or occupational function.       be a source of distress and/ or interference with usual
                                                        activities.
 not attributable to the effects of a substance or
  another medical condition.                           thoughts or impulses being recognized as the
                                                        person’s own, there must be at least one thought or
 the disturbance is not better explained by the
                                                        act that is resisted unsuccessfully.
  symptoms of another mental disorder.
                                                       compulsive acts, while they may relieve tension, are
 the degree of insight that a patient possesses,
                                                        not in themselves intrinsically pleasurable.
  ranging from ‘good or fair’ to ‘absent’ or
  ‘delusional’.                                        predominantly taking the form: obsessional thoughts
                                                        and ruminations, or compulsive acts, or mixed
 Tic-related.
                                                        obsessional thoughts and acts.
   Exclusion:
                 DSM 5                                       ICD 10
❑ Differentiates OCD from more Axis I        ❑ Specific rules aboutdiagnosing OCD with
  disorders, but allows OCD to be              depressive disorders; cannot diagnosis
  diagnosed with depressive disorders,         OCD in those with schizophrenia or
  schizophrenia, and Tourette syndrome.        Tourette syndrome
  Specifically, allows OCD to be diagnosed
  even in the presence of delusional OCD
  beliefs
     Clinical Picture
 Obsessional         Obsessional     Obsessional       Obsessional     Obsessional        Obsessional
  thoughts           ruminations      impulses           rituals        slowness           phobias
Words, ideas,       Internal        Urges to          Both mental     Obsessional        Obsessional
and beliefs         debates in      perform acts,     activities      thoughts           thoughts and
that are            which           usually           and repeated    and rituals lead   compulsive
recognized by       arguments for   of a violent or   but senseless   to slow            rituals may
patients as their   and against     embarrassing      behaviours.     performance, a     worsen in
own, and            even the        kind.                             few obsessional    certain
that intrude        simplest                                          patients are       situations. The
forcibly into the   everyday                                          afflicted by       person may
mind. It is the     actions are                                       extreme            avoid such
combination of      reviewed                                          slowness that is   situations
an inner sense      endlessly.                                        out of             because they
of compulsion                                                         proportion to      cause distress,
and of efforts at                                                     other              just as people
resistance.                                                           symptoms.          with phobic
                                                                                         disorders avoid
                                                                                         specific
                                                                                         situations
 Thought–action             Responsibility                  Non-specific                     Emotion
     fusion                                                cognitive biases
• Thoughts or images    •   The belief that one has    •    Intolerance of             •   anxiety
  become fused with         power that is pivotal to        uncertainty, ambiguity     •   disgust
  reality.                  bring about or prevent          and change                 •   shame
                            subjectively crucial       •    The need for control
• magical thinking’                                                                    •   guilt
                            negative outcomes.         •    Excessively narrow
  (Rachman, 1993)           These outcomes may              focusing of attention      •   embarrasment
• moral thought–            be actual, that is              to monitor for potential   •   frustration
  action fusion             having consequences             threats                    •   irritability
• thought–object            in the real world,         •    Excessive attentional
  fusion (Gwilliam et       and/or at a moral               bias on monitoring
  al, 2004).                level (Salkovskiset al,         intrusive thoughts,
                            1995).                          images or urges
                        •   An overestimation.         •    Reduced attention to
                                                            real events
                        •   the belief that harm
                            might occur to the self,
                            a loved one or
                            another vulnerable
                            person through what
                            the individual might
                            do or fail to do.
    Safety-seeking                          Avoidance                 Excessive reassurance
      behaviours                                                          seeking (ERS)
•   action taken in a feared      • effort or activity intended to • focuses on a perceived threat
    situation with the aim of
                                    avert a perceived internal       and its associated distress.
    preventing catastrophe
    and reducing harm               or external trigger of the
    (Salkovskis, 1985).             obsession and its              • reassurance seeking in OCD is
                                    associated distress.             often more stereotypic.
•   includes compulsions and
    neutralising behaviours.                                        • Rachman (2002) described ERS
                                  • most commonly seen in             as a checking compulsion by
•   Neutralising is any covert,     fears of contamination.           proxy, in which the person
    voluntary or effortful                                            repeatedly seeks the same
    mental action carried out
                                  •   Avoidance can also occur        reassurance from others, often
    to prevent or minimise
    harm and anxiety with the         mentally: trying not to think   looking for the same specific
    goal to either                    or feel something upsetting.    answer to obtain relief from
    compensate or eliminate                                           anxiety, discomfort, and a
    the effects of the                                                heightened sense of
    obsession.                                                        responsibility for harm
                                                                      associated with the obsession.
•   paradoxical
    enhancement of the
    frequency of the thought
    in a rebound manner.
References
 Clark, D. A. (2020). Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for OCD and Its Subtypes. 2nd Edition.
  The Guilford Press: NY.
 Harrison, P., Cowen, P., Burns, T., & Fazel, M. (2018). Shorter Oxford Textbook of Psychiatry.
  Oxford University Press: UK.
 Veale, D. (2007). Cognitive–behavioural therapy for obsessive–compulsive disorder.
  Advances in Psychiatric Treatment, 13, 438–446.
 Simpson, H. B., & Reddy, Y. C. J. (2014). Obsessive-Compulsive disorder for ICD-11:
  proposed changes to diagnostic guidelines and specifiers. Rev Bras Psiquiatr, 36(1), 3-13.