Home self-assessment and self-treatment of obsessive-compulsive disorder using a manual and a computer-conducted telephone interview: Replication of a UK-US study
M. Bachofen et al., Home self-assessment and self-treatment of obsessive-compulsive disorder using a manual and a computer-conducted telephone interview: Replication of a UK-US study, J CLIN PSY, 60(8), 1999, pp. 545-549
Background: This open study replicates and extends previous pilot work with
BT STEPS, a self-therapy system to assess and treat obsessive-compulsive d
isorder (OCD) through exposure and ritual prevention.
Method: 21 OCD patients entered this open trial, using a self-guiding manua
l and any Touch-Tone telephone to access computer-driven interviews via an
Interactive Voice Response system. The patients also used the system to rat
e progress on rating scales.
Results: The results support those of the previous open study. Of the 21 pa
tients, 16 (76%) completed self-assessment over a mean of 21 days. Of these
, 10 patients (48%) went on to do 2 or more exposure and ritual prevention
sessions over a mean of 64 days: they improved significantly on OCD symptom
s, as much as is usual with serotonin reuptake inhibitor medication, and in
mood and work/social adjustment. Improvement was predicted by baseline mot
ivation and by rapid completion of self-assessment with BT STEPS, even thou
gh self-assessment alone was not therapeutic.
Conclusion: The significant improvement in the intent-to-treat analysis was
due to the subgroup of patients (48% of those who began BT STEPS) who went
beyond self-assessment to do exposure and ritual prevention self-therapy a
t home guided by BT STEPS. A controlled trial is now needed.