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A Curtin University of Technology doctoral study has found that group therapy is a practical and effective form of treatment for obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD).
The study was conducted by Dr Rebecca Anderson through Curtin's School of Psychology. Her thesis "Symptom Presentation and Treatment Of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder: Understanding Case Complexity" sought to address the limitations of individual therapy for OCD.
"Access to clinicians trained in methods known to be effective for treating OCD is recognized as limited due to both the lack of skilled clinicians and the time-intensive nature of standard individual therapy," Dr Anderson said explaining the rationale behind the study.
"As a mean of increasing access to skilled clinicians, I felt that it was significant to examine the efficacy of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) where elements of cognitive therapy and exposure and response prevention are combined in a group mode."
Dr Anderson's research consisted of two linked studies involving 49 participants over a period of two years.
The research found that the difference in gains between the participants receiving individual versus group therapy were not maintained after a one-month follow-up period right after the initial treatment period.
"While more participants receiving individual CBT met the recovered status post-treatment, after the one-month period these gains were not maintained," Dr Anderson said.
"As a result, the continued use of group CBT was deemed to be both a practical and effective treatment delivery for OCD with the benefits of it being substantially more accessible and cost-effective for patients."
Related research:
Anderson RA. Symptom Presentation and Treatment Of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder: Understanding Case Complexity Doctoral thesis, 2007
Anderson RA, Rees CS. Group versus individual cognitive-behavioural treatment for obsessive-compulsive disorder: A controlled trial Behav Res Ther. 2007 Jan;45(1):123-137 [Abstract]
tags: cognitive behavior therapy obsessive compulsive disorder
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Epidemiological studies describing population characteristics which collect data at one point in time and then consider relationships between observed characteristics.. Because they don't look at time trends they cannot establish causes.
