Where Can I Find Help For Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder, OCD in Chicago, Illinois?

Are you looking for help with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder, OCD, in Chicago, Illinois?  Stop suffering alone.  Mark D. Parisi, Psy.D. & Associates, P.C. is an Illinois-licensed professional service corporation that has been providing evidence-based treatment for Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder, OCD in Metro Chicago since 2000.  Let our staff of licensed mental health professionals help you overcome the debilitating effects of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder or OCD as it is often called.  We understand that the causes and solutions of OCD are multi-faceted.  We start by carefully assessing the unique contributing factors to your OCD and understanding the severity of your condition.  We then custom design a treatment plan tailored to your unique symptoms of OCD.  Our treatment approach combines Exposure Training with Response Prevention, or ERP for short.  This treatment approach is the most well-researched and validated technique for reducing the symptoms of OCD.  We also combine psychiatric medication management which, in many cases, can allow you to feel in enough control to benefit from psychotherapy.

To find out more about how Mark D. Parisi, Psy.D. & Associates, P.C. offers help for Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder, OCD in Chicago, Illinois, please visit our website or call us for a no-obligation consultation or to set up an appointment at (847) 909-9858.

Posted in OCD

Understanding OCD Diagnosis and Treatment

Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, or OCD, as it is commonly called, is a type of Anxiety Disorder and refers to a pattern of intrusive, repetitive thoughts that cause an individual to perform acts in order to prevent something terrible from happening. The acts become ritualistic and can overtake an individual’s life.

There are four characteristics of obsessions and two characteristics of compulsions used to diagnose OCD:

Obsessions include:

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  • The person experiences recurrent and persistent and intrusive thoughts or impulses that cause distress or anxiety.
  • The impulses or thoughts are not about real life problems.
  • The person tries to ignore and suppress the impulse.
  • The person recognizes that the obsession is not based in reality.

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Compulsions include:

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  • Repetitive behavior or mental acts the person feels must performed in compliance with rigid rules.
  • The behavior is aimed at preventing or reducing the effects of a dreaded event or situation, even though the acts are not connected to the issue.

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There are any numbers of examples of these controlling ritualistic behaviors. For example:
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  • A person who is obsessed with germs may feel the need to wash their hands again and again. There may be a specific number of times to wash or to rinse their hands or a specific way to apply the soap.
  • People can be obsessed with superstitions, such as avoiding stepping on the cracks in the cement.
  • A person who is obsessed with the thought that each time they enter a room they must sit down, or have to count the seams in the wallpaper, or even turn in circles a specific number of times before they can exit the room.

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There are several different forms of treatment recommended to treat OCD. Perhaps the most studied and effective form of treatment is known as Exposure Training with Response Prevention, or ERP, as it is called. Here, the individual is gradually exposed to anxiety-provoking situations and is prevented from engaging in the compulsive behavior. For example, the individual might be encouraged to touch a “dirty” doorknob, but then prevented from washing his / her hands. ERP gradually breaks down the link between obsessions and compulsions and weakens the grip of OCD.  Medication can also prove effective in lessening the symptoms of OCD.  One medication that has received particular attention is the anti-depressant medication, Luvox, which has shown promise in lessening the constellation of symptoms attributed to OCD.