The effects of depression on the treatment of OCD in a residential sample

Author:

Wetterneck Chad T.1,Leonard Rachel C.2,Adams Thomas G.234,Riemann Bradley C.2,Grau Peter5,Franklin Martin E.26

Affiliation:

1. Trauma Recovery Services, Rogers Behavioral Health, Oconomowoc, Wisconsin.

2. Rogers Behavioral Health, Oconomowoc, Wisconsin.

3. Yale University School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry, New Haven, Connecticut.

4. Rogers Behavioral Health, as well as the Clinical Neuroscience Division of the VA National Center for PTSD, West Haven, Connecticut.

5. Department of Counseling and Education at Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

6. Department of Psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Abstract

Studies investigating the impact of depressive symptoms on obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) treatment have yielded mixed findings. The purpose of the study is to extend previous research, which primarily used outpatient samples, to determine whether depression affects OCD treatment outcome among patients receiving intensive residential treatment. OCD patients receiving residential treatment based primarily on exposure and response prevention (ERP) provided data regarding symptoms of depression and OCD at admission and discharge. Patients reported large and significant reductions in OCD symptoms over the course of treatment. Change in OCD symptoms was not significantly affected by depressive symptoms, including patients with severe depressive symptoms. Change in depressive symptoms over the course of treatment was, however, robustly related to change in OCD symptoms, especially among patients who began treatment with severe symptoms of depression. These findings suggest that cognitive-behavior therapy delivered in a residential treatment setting drastically reduces OCD symptoms regardless of depressive symptoms.

Publisher

Guilford Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology,Phychiatric Mental Health

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