N. Munchau et al., ESTABLISHMENT OF BEHAVIORAL SELF-HELP GRO UPS FOR OBSESSIVE-COMPULSIVE DISORDER BY EXPERT TRAINING - AN EXPERIMENTAL-STUDY, Verhaltenstherapie, 6(3), 1996, pp. 143-160
Obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) often tends to develop a chronic c
ourse of illness. Treatment results with multimodal behaviour therapy
are less impressive than in most anxiety disorders. The same holds tru
e for pharmacotherapy, as positive effects usually disappear in more t
han 70% of patients soon after drug withdrawal. In contrast to many ot
her psychiatric and somatic disorders with a chronic course, there are
hardly any long-term Self-Help groups for patients with OCD. Apart fr
om OCD symptomatology, it appears that early chronic social deficits a
nd pseudo-coping (by latent aggressiveness), both leading to severe co
mmunication disturbances, are the main reasons for this situation. It
is possible to foster the establishment of useful self-help groups for
OCD by initial short-term training with expert behaviour therapists?
This study investigates the results with 45 patients, distributed over
8 groups (5-8 members each). Most patients had a very chronic course
of illness and had received multimodal previous treatments (behaviour
therapy, psychotherapy, pharmacotherapy). The chances and limits of a
systematic expert training over the first 10 sessions (once a week) an
d the subsequent development of the groups without therapists are demo
nstrated. Main aims of this training were: 'Unspecific' (improvement o
f communication skills and 'group suitability'; coping with daily life
problems; increased pleasure and gratification from daily life activi
ties) and symptom-'specific' (information about OCD and its treatment;
training in functional self-analysis of biographical and current even
ts and obsessive compulsive behaviours; behavioural self-help for obse
ssions and compulsions, such as exposure). Outcome data were analysed
considering specifically the degree of illness, chronicity, the amount
and quality of previous treatments and parallel medication. Recommend
ations for future research are given.