Cognitive Behaviour Therapy For OCD (Part 2)

What is the term EXPOSURE in CBT? Exposure is typically the opposite of avoidance. Exposure is when you face the distressing obsessive thought deliberately and avoid the compulsion. This can be done in vivo or imaginal. For example., if you are highly distressed about touching door knobs (due to concerns of contamination), deliberately increase the…

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Cognitive Behaviour Therapy For OCD (Part 4)

Thinking errors are unhelpful patterns of thinking which lead to distress and may not be logical. Thinking errors can be present in obsessive-compulsive disorder.   Thinking error 1 – This is an inability to tolerate uncertainty. An example is “Being uncertain if one has locked the door”. This leads to concern about burglary and being…

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Cognitive Behaviour Therapy For OCD (Part 5)

In this blog, we will learn how to challenge Thinking Error 2, an unhelpful thinking pattern about “Not being able to get the “Just right” feeling and the inability to tolerate the feeling of uncertainty. This may present as intrusive doubts if you have left an unclean spot on your hand after using the toilet.…

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Cognitive Behaviour Therapy For OCD (Part 7)

In this blog, we will learn how to challenge another unhelpful thinking pattern that can occur in OCD. The belief that one has an exaggerated sense of responsibility. This can play out when one has an intrusive doubt about whether one has locked the door. The compulsion could include checking the lock repeatedly until one…

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Cognitive Behaviour Therapy For OCD (Part 8)

This blog considers thinking errors five and six, which can occur in OCD. Thinking error 5 is the unhelpful pattern of overestimating the consequences of one’s actions. This might lead to one feeling excessively responsible and concerned about others, leading to many safety behaviours and compulsions. They may overestimate the danger of their actions and…

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Cognitive Behaviour Therapy For OCD – Part 9

In this blog, we are going to consider thinking error 7. Thinking a thought is equivalent to committing the action and makes one a bad person. For example., we can see this pattern in religiosity OCD and harm OCD. Consider a scenario when Mr X, a 30-year-old devoutly religious person and a charitable, hard-working, law-abiding…

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Cognitive Behaviour Therapy For OCD (Part 10)

In this blog, we will learn more about Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP), the critical core of CBT treatment for OCD. In short, ERP is an evidence-based therapeutic approach for people with OCD. Initially, it was thought to work by a principle of HABITUATION (reduced response to the stimulus on repeated exposure). Still, it is…

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