OCD Treatments Lansing MI

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on OCD Treatments. You will find informative articles about OCD Treatments, including "Obsessed with Order or OCD?". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Lansing, MI that can help answer your questions about OCD Treatments.

Mr. Derrick Ampey
Professional Psychological & Rehabilition Services P.C.

517-321-5900
302 South Waverly Road Suite 1
Lansing, MI
Jason Stentoumis
517-999-3935
2535 E. Mt. Hope Ave
Lansing, MI
Ms. Tish Vincent
Tish Vincent MSW

517-332-2433
790 W. Lake Lansing Rd., Ste. 300
East Lansing, MI
Brenda Lovegrove Lepisto
517-333-0332
4572 S. Hagadorn Rd.
East Lansing, MI
David G. Rockwell
(517) 333-0173
415 W Grand River Ave
East Lansing, MI
Mrs. Elizabeth Danowski
Play. Build. Grow. PLC

517-268-8052
913 West Holmes Road Suite 179
Lansing, MI
Sarita R. Overton
(517) 333-9494
790 W Lake Lansing Rd, Ste 500
East Lansing, MI
Ms. Pamella Monaghan
Lansing Psychological Associates

517-337-6546
234 Michigan Ave
East Lansing, MI
Bertram P. Karon
(517) 332-3083
420 Wayland Avenue
East Lansing, MI
Louis Post
(517) 349-8388
4084 Okemos Rd
Okemos, MI
Data Provided by:
  

Obsessed with Order or OCD?

Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD) is a type of anxiety disorder that may first appear as strange or odd behaviors. In children, the onset typically occurs between the ages of 8 and 13 and is rarely diagnosed in preschoolers.

People with OCD are distressed by constant, unwanted thoughts or impulses (obsessions). To relieve the anxiety that results, a behavior (compulsion) gets repeated over and over again. A child who is obsessed about germs, for instance, might wash his hands multiple times as a temporary form of stress relief.

Alicia Nordstrom, Ph.D. cautions concerned parents about distinguishing normal oppositional behavior that is common in the 2 to 4-year-old age group from compulsive behavior. "A compulsion is a behavior intended to reduce anxiety caused by an obsession (an intrusive thought) and is different than a child who is being stubborn, asserting independence, or trying to annoy her parents which is often the case with toddlers."

Where it Comes From

According to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, a professional journal published by the American Psychiatric Association (2000), OCD is classified as an anxiety disorders because anxiety is the driving force of the obsessions. "The person feels anxious and performs a compulsion to relieve the anxiety, but just temporarily because the intrusive obsession will crop up again shortly causing the person to repeat the compulsion, and the cycle continues," Nordstrom explains.

OCD does have a genetic component and many of the common OCD targets are similar between family members.

Diagnosing OCD

If you suspect a problem, consult your pediatrician who may refer you to a mental health professional. Nordstrom says it takes a well-trained and skilled clinician to differentiate whether a repetitive behavior stems from OCD or ASD (Autism Spectrum Disorder), a group of conditions that includes autism and Asperger Syndrome.

According to Nordstrom, the defining feature for OCD diagnosis is what is driving the behavior. If it's anxiety--"I must wash my hands or I will get a terrible illness" or "I must flip the light switch five times or else something bad will happen"--then it represents OCD.  "If the behavior stems from a need to block out an over stimulating world by narrowing focus on a very specific stimulus (circles on a rug), then it would represent ASD," explains the expert. "Although the behavior might appear similar, it is its function that defines it."

Treating OCD

While there are no preventive measures to reduce the incidence of OCD in children, early detection and intervention can reduce the severity of symptoms and improve the quality of life for sufferers.

Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) alone or in conjunction with medication can be effective treatments for OCD in children.

"Therapists will often use an analogy of OCD as a 'monster' on their back to help children realize that the condition is controlling them and it is n...

Click here to read more from Quality Health