Abstract
Objective: To observe the effects that the COVID-19 pandemic has had on patients with contamination fear at obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), and how this can be used to improve psychotherapeutic treatment. Materials and methods: 33 patients were involved, divided into 2 groups, in one of which we used additional experimental features of psychotherapy. OCD total condition and separate symptoms were assessed using Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale (Y-BOCS). Results: Patients, included in Group A, showed significantly better improvement in both total Y-BOCS score, as well as in particular symptoms connected with so-called mental contamination. Conclusions: Adding reality-based and emotionally significant features of contamination control and prevention to standard cognitive-behavioral therapy protocol may seriously improve outcomes in the treatment of mental contamination obsessions. The period of pandemics, as well as post-pandemic, can be used for intense further research in this area in a larger selection of patients. Long-term follow-up is recommended to clarify the stability of positive changes.
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