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Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder and Social Anxiety Disorder

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Chapter 7: Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder and Social Anxiety Disorder Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) Characterized by obsessive thoughts and compulsive behaviors ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder and Social Anxiety Disorder


1
Chapter 7
  • Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder and Social Anxiety
    Disorder

2
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)
  • Characterized by obsessive thoughts and
    compulsive behaviors that arise as a consequence
    of those thoughts.
  • Thoughts may appear delusional or have a
    psychotic quality however, unlike individuals
    with a psychotic disorder, individuals with OCD
    are aware of how irrational their thoughts are.

3
OCD
  • Begins at a young age (for men, 6 to 15, and for
    women, 20 to 29).
  • Usually a gradual onset.
  • 1 to 3 of people will develop OCD in their
    lifetime.
  • Chronic course and often very debilitating.

4
OCD diagnostic criteria
  • Either obsessions or compulsions
  • Obsessions as defined by all of the following
  • Recurrent and persistent thoughts, impulses, or
    images that are experienced as intrusive and
    inappropriate and that cause distress and
    anxiety.
  • Thoughts, impulses, or images are not simply
    excessive worries about real life problems.
  • The person attempts to ignore or suppress such
    thoughts, impulses, or images, or to neutralize
    them with some other thought or action.
  • The person recognizes that the obsessional
    thoughts, impulses, or images are a product of
    his or her own mind.
  • Contamination, aggression, sexual, blasphemy,
    doubts

5
OCD diagnostic criteria
  • Compulsions as defined by all of the following
  • Repetitive behaviors (e.g., hand washing,
    ordering, checking) or mental acts (e.g.,
    praying, counting, repeating words silently) that
    the person feels driven to perform in response to
    an obsession or according to particular rules.
  • The behaviors or mental acts are aimed at
    preventing or reducing distress or preventing
    some dreaded event or situation however, these
    behaviors or mental acts either are not connected
    in a realistic way with what they are designed to
    neutralize or prevent or are clearly excessive.
  • Obsessions and Compulsions are viewed as
    unreasonable.

6
Theories of OCD
  • Most prominent psychological theory of OCD is
    cognitive-behavioral in nature.
  • Obsessions are caused by catastrophic
    misinterpretation of the significance of
    intrusive thoughts/images/impulses.
  • Through this catastrophic misinterpretation,
    neutral cues in the environment or internally are
    turned into threatening ones, leading to
    avoidance (compulsions).

7
Theories of OCD
  • As a result of this avoidance, catastrophic
    misinterpretations are never challenged and thus
    persist. However, relief is achieved in the short
    term (compulsions negatively reinforced).
  • Attempts are made to avoid, neutralize, or
    suppress obsessions, leading to a vicious cycle.
  • Obsession ? Neutralization ? Relief ?
    Confirmation of belief ? Obsession

8
Theories of OCD
  • Inflated responsibility for thoughts stemming
    from moralistic, rigid ways of thinking.
  • Thought-action fusion.
  • Underlying beliefs about ones ability to control
    thoughts.

9
Treatment
  • Cognitive Restructuring and Exposure
  • Response prevention ? prevent the use of
    compulsions to manage obsessive thoughts. In
    doing so, individual may habituate to anxiety as
    a result of obsessions and obsessions can be
    disconfirmed.

10
Social Anxiety Disorder
  • Persistent fears of situations involving social
    interaction or social performance or situations
    in which there is the potential for scrutiny by
    others.
  • More than 13 of the population meet criteria for
    SAD at some point in their lives.
  • More than just shyness.
  • Generalized (most social situations),
    Non-generalized (limited to specific situations)

11
Model of SAD
  • Underlying beliefs that people are critical.
  • Poor mental representation of the self,
    especially in social situations.
  • Misinterpretation of internal and external cues
    that negatively influence the mental
    representation of the self.

12
A Model of SAD
  • Attentional bias for negative cues (e.g.,
    frowning, yawning) that confirm maladaptive
    beliefs about the self and performance.
  • All of this information is used to create a
    prediction of what the audience expects and how
    the individual is performing. With SAD, there is
    a huge discrepancy between these two evaluations.

13
A Model of SAD
  • Mental resources allocated to many different
    tasks (multiple-task paradigm).
  • -Monitor external threat
  • -Monitor self-presentation
  • -Attention also given to task at hand
  • All of this results in heightened anxiety (e.g.,
    blushing, sweating, stammering) and avoidance
    behaviors (e.g., avoiding eye contact, reducing
    verbal output, etc.)

14
Treatment
  • Again, cognitive-behavioral treatment has been
    found to be highly effective for SAD.
  • Cognitive restructuring for maladaptive beliefs
    about the self, performance expectations, and
    interpretations of audiences behavior.
  • Exposure to social situations.
  • Attentional control training.
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