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A 2-day course for 6-16 people.
Download printable Microsoft Word information Sheet
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Overview:
Obsessive Compulsive Disorder is where a person has an obsessive belief (for example that their hands are contaminated) and a compulsion to perform a behavior that will relieve the distress (for example to wash their hands). Typically the obsessions and compulsions get more and more severe and may expand to include many facets of everyday life. Inevitably, therefore, this causes great distress to the sufferer and those around them, and the seeming inability to control their own behavior simply results in additional distress and bewilderment. Usually, those with OCD realize that their behavior is 'not normal' and this is a clear differentiator between obsessional beliefs and psychotic ones.
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The aims of the course:
The aims are (a) to describe Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, (b) to describe the theory which explains how OCD develops and (c) to cover the methods of treatment for OCD in a way that encourages delegates to use them subsequently.
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The course covers:
• What is OCD? Symptoms including: behavioral, biological, emotional, and cognitive
symptoms.
• Causes and maintaining factors of OCD.
• A description of obsessions and compulsions and how they inter relate.
• NICE guidelines for OCD and body dysmorphic disorder (BDD is a preoccupation with
a perceived defect in ones appearance).
• The NICE stepped care approach, both pharmacological and psychological/behavioral.
• The measurement of OCD. In evidence based practice it is essential to obtain evidence
from the patient, their friends and their relatives. Objective and subjective measures.
• Exposure plus response prevention; its major role in OCD, how we do it, how anxiety
decreases over time and how people with OCD need so much support and
encouragement to carry on with the helpful treatment.
• Helpful adjuncts to therapy: modelling, extended sessions, and more.
• Psycho-education, patient-practice and differential reinforcement.
• Key metaphors that are helpful in explanation and encouragement for people with OCD.
• Social factors. Social factors are often implicated in OCD, so it is important to assess
and address them.
• The limited role of logical evidence based reasoning in OCD.
• OCD and autistic spectrum disorders. A feature of ASD is the 'obsessionality' that frequently accompanies it. Can they be treated in the same way as other OCD cases?
• Sexual obsessions and obsessions with previous partners. An examination of whether
these can be treated in the same way as OCD obsessions.
Course methods include lectures, discussions, video material, case studies and practice exercises.
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Download printable Microsoft Word information Sheet
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A 2-day course. We bring the training to you and up to 16 people can attend for an all-inclusive fee of $5,795 plus GST/HST.
Also available 'online' (via the web)
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"This course was hugely beneficial for me both in practice and in my counselling work. Very enjoyable and well presented. Thank you."
Course Delegate
"Excellently presented. Loved the variation of exercises, lectures, videos, role plays etc. Fab!!"
Course Delegate
"I found the courses very interesting and came away with lots of useful information. The presenter was excellent. Thank you."
Course Delegate
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