Abstract

Background The clinical manifestation of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) differs from patient to patient, indicating that the content of the obsessions and compulsions varies. Therefore, the present study aims to find the prevalence of the sub-types of OCD.
 Objectives This study addresses the association of the sub-types of obsessions and compulsion with gender, age, and marital status.
 Patients and MethodsSeventy-five patients with OCD from a psychiatric clinic, who were diagnosed through an unstructured interview, participated in this study, which utilized a retrospective research design. The data was obtained from the case files of the patients, where their diagnosis and the content of their obsessions and compulsion were specified.
 ResultsThe results showed that the most prevalent obsession in the sample was contamination obsessions. They were followed by religious, doubting, aggressive, symmetry, and sexual obsessions. As for compulsions, cleaning/washing was the most common among the participants, followed by mental rituals, whereas checking and arranging compulsions were the least common. The results also revealed that contamination obsession had a significant association with gender.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call