Abstract

The current study examined correlates, moderators, and mediators of functional impairment in 98 treatment-seeking adults with obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD). Participants completed or were administered measures assessing obsessive–compulsive symptom severity, functional impairment, resistance against symptoms, interference due to obsessive–compulsive symptoms, depressive symptoms, insight, and anxiety sensitivity. Results indicated that all factors, except insight into symptoms, were significantly correlated with functional impairment. The relationship between obsessive–compulsive symptom severity and functional impairment was not moderated by patient insight, resistance against obsessive–compulsive symptoms, or anxiety sensitivity. Mediational analyses indicated that obsessive–compulsive symptom severity mediated the relationship between anxiety sensitivity and obsessive–compulsive related impairment. Indeed, anxiety sensitivity may play an important contributory role in exacerbating impairment through increases in obsessive–compulsive symptom severity. Depressive symptoms mediated the relationship between obsessive–compulsive symptom severity and obsessive–compulsive related impairment. Implications for assessment and treatment are discussed.

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