scholarly journals The Complete CBT Guide for Anxiety: A Self-Help Guide for Anxiety, Panic, Social Anxiety, Phobias, Health Anxiety and Obsessive Compulsive Disorder Edited by Roz Shafran, Lee Brosan, Peter Cooper, Constable & Robinson, 2013, £14.99, pb, 464 pp. ISBN: 9781849018968

2013 ◽  
Vol 37 (8) ◽  
pp. 278-278
Author(s):  
Rory Conn
Author(s):  
Victoria Bream ◽  
Fiona Challacombe ◽  
Asmita Palmer ◽  
Paul Salkovskis

This chapter provides a practical guide to assessing obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) that is both informative to the inexperienced clinician and addresses questions raised by the experienced clinician. It will summarize the diagnostic criteria for OCD, including advice on making a differential diagnosis when presented with symptoms that are associated with other disorders; for example, differentiating OCD from psychosis, generalized anxiety disorder, or health anxiety. It will guide the reader through the process of conducting a thorough assessment of the patient’s presenting problems, including OCD and any comorbid problems. The chapter will offer guidance on how to engage the person with OCD and promote trust. There is clear guidance on risk assessment, differentiating between primary risk factors (which clinicians are typically very good at assessing), and secondary risk factors (which may easily be overlooked). Advice on structuring an assessment and on appropriate assessment tools is provided.


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 204380871882068 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steffen Moritz ◽  
Schaimaa Irshaid ◽  
Annabel Beiner ◽  
Marit Hauschildt ◽  
Franziska Miegel

Objective: In Arabic-speaking countries, most individuals with depression or obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD) do not seek or receive evidence-based treatment due to a dearth of facilities, shame/self-stigma, or religious concerns. The feasibility and effectiveness of “Western” psychotherapeutic concepts have rarely been evaluated for Arabic-speaking populations. The present study examined the efficacy of My Metacognitive Training (myMCT), a trans-therapeutic self-help manual, in a mixed sample of participants with depression and/or OCD. We considered both participants with depression and/or OCD because a number of cognitive biases and dysfunctional beliefs are shared by the two disorders. Method: The myMCT manual was translated into Arabic. A total of 160 individuals with either self-reported OCD and/or self-reported depression were recruited. Individuals were assessed at baseline and then randomized either to myMCT ( n = 84) or to a wait-list control condition ( n = 76). Six weeks later, individuals were invited to the post assessment. The Beck Depression Inventory (BDI-II) served here as the primary outcome. Secondary outcomes were the Obsessive–Compulsive Inventory–Revised (OCI-R) and the self-rating version of the Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale (OCD patients only). Individuals were reimbursed with a 17€ voucher. Results: Completion rates were similarly low in the two groups (myMCT: 37%, controls: 35%). Presumably because of the high rate of noncompletion and nonadherence (29%), the intention-to-treat analyses failed to yield a significant effect. Those who had at least started the myMCT intervention improved significantly on the BDI-II at a large effect size. A significantly larger improvement among those who had started or completed the myMCT intervention was also seen on the OCI-R at a large effect size. Conclusions: Individuals who studied the myMCT manual showed large improvement on the BDI-II, irrespective of their primary symptomatology. However, the results are seriously compromised by the low completion rates in both conditions. Importantly, evaluations using the same manual in other language populations (and with other background cultures) produced good to excellent retention rates. The study demonstrates that self-help manuals may not represent a suitable medium for large-scale dissemination of evidence-based self-help material in an Arab population and corroborates prior findings suggesting low adherence in this population. Whether smartphone apps and Internet interventions represent more viable alternatives than self-help manuals needs to be tested, as well as specific barriers preventing dissemination and completion in this population.


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