Offering expert treatment for all types of OCD, including unwanted obsessional thoughts. Our OCD treatment program is typically 10 weeks. We offer twice-weekly sessions, groups, and intensive programs. Intensive program can be in person or online. Low cost options available. Contact us...
392 Merrow Rd, Suite E,
Tolland, CT 06084
Office: (860) 830-7838
Obsessive-compulsive disorder comes in many forms
DOI: 10.1093/med-psych/9780190624798.001.0001
Specialty: Clinical Psychology, Psychosocial Interventions and Psychotherapy
ISBN: 9780190624798
Disorder: Sexual Disorders, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Although there have been several manuals written about how to treat obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) using cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), there has been little focus on applying these solid principles to help those suffering from distressing sexual obsessions. Treating sexual obsessions in OCD is different from treating of other forms of OCD due to greater feelings of shame from symptoms, widespread misdiagnosis from doctors and therapists, and the hidden nature of ritualizing behaviors.
The world experts on sexual symptoms in OCD, Dr. Monnica T. Williams, Ph.D., ABPP & Dr. Chad T. Wetterneck, Ph.D., have written this book to help more people with this challenging form of OCD get better.
This book gives mental health professionals the tools needed to successfully help clients suffering from unwanted, intrusive thoughts of a sexual nature. It provides instructions on how to diagnose OCD in clients reporting sexual obsessions, guidance on measures to employ during assessment, and a discussion of differential diagnoses. It includes a step-by-step manual describing how to provide treatment, using a combination of exposure and ritual (response) prevention (Ex/RP), cognitive therapy, and newer CBT techniques. Also included are case examples of pedophile-themed OCD (sometimes called P-OCD) and sexual orientation worries in OCD (called SO-OCD or H-OCD) and their treatment approaches, along with a catalogue of specific ideas for in vivo exposures and detailed templates for imaginal exposures. Included are strategies therapists can use to tackle relationship issues that commonly emerge as a result of sexually-themed OCD. This book also has several appendices of handouts and helpful measures for therapists to use clients.
Sexual Obsessions in OCD is available from Amazon.com (USA) and Amazon.ca (Canada), and it is now also available as an audiobook.
"This is an exceptionally impressive and comprehensive book! Specific examples of hierarchies, step-by-step treatment descriptions for sexual obsessions are well written. Adding 'third wave' treatments- ACT and Association Splitting provides richness to standard ERP/CBT approaches. Sexual obsessions are confusing for most clinicians. This book is among those considered a seminal resource for OCD practitioners and will receive high acclaim."
— Barbara Van Noppen, PhD, LCSW, Vice Chair for Faculty Development, Associate Professor at USC, President, OCD Southern California, an affiliate of the International OCD Foundation
"Finally, a book dedicated to understanding sexual obsessions in OCD! Williams and Wetterneck, two leaders in the field of OCD assessment and treatment, have compiled an expert cast of authors who intimately examine how to conceptualize, assess, and treat sexual obsessive-compulsive symptoms. This valuable text belongs on the shelf of any clinician specializing in OCD and related disorders."
— Eric Storch, PhD, Professor and McIngvale Presidential Endowed Chair, Vice Chair & Head, Psychology, Menninger Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Baylor College of Medicine
"Williams (Univ. of Ottawa) and Wetterneck, both highly respected clinical psychologists, have produced what is arguably the magisterial volume on approaching sexual obsessions in obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD). The authors present eight expansive and rich chapters, some cowritten with other clinicians and researchers, covering assessment and diagnosis, treatment techniques, and specific subjects such as relationship issues and pedophile obsessions. Extensive appendixes offer material that can be reproduced for clients, as clinical measures, and as templates for session notes. This much-needed volume draws on evidence-based practices such as cognitive behavioral therapy, exposure and response prevention, and mindfulness-informed practices such as acceptance and commitment therapy. One of the strengths of the volume is precisely its open approach to a multitude of practices without sacrificing the depth required to guide practitioners who must work with a challenging population of clients. There is currently no better book on the sexual obsessions specific to OCD, and this definitive volume serves as an indispensable resource for students and practitioners of psychology, psychiatry, and social work, as well as those employed in allied mental health fields.
— M. Uebel, University of Texas
A. Materials for Clients (Preview here at OUP)
B. Measures (Preview here at OUP)
C. Session Notes (Preview here at OUP)
Development of a client workbook is underway at the Center for Mental Health Disparities.
Although any medical doctor can take your blood pressure, only a few can do heart surgery. Likewise, any therapist can help someone who is feeling a bit blue, but only a few can effectively treat OCD.
OCD treatment is a type of therapy that requires a specialized protocol called Exposure and Ritual Prevention (ERP or EX/RP).
Learn about the Top Mistakes Made by OCD Therapists.
One stereotype is that people with OCD are neat and tidy to a fault. Actually, nothing could be further from the truth. Although many people with OCD wash because they are concerned about dirt and germs, being tidy is actually not a typical symptom of the disorder. Almost two-thirds of people with OCD are also hoarders...
Learn more about the Top Myths about OCD.
Sexual worries, fears, and anxieties are common in obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). This book is the first of its kind to explain sexual obsessions in OCD with step-by-step instructions on how mental health professonals can treat clients with these troubling symptoms. People with OCD may fear committing a harmful sexual act or being sexually aggressive. They may even have unwanted thoughts about committing a sexual act with a child. This is not the same as having a sexual fantasy, being a pedophile, or being homophobic, but a symptom of OCD, a treatable disorder. Learn more at the New England OCD Institute.