Addiction Research

Addiction Research

Open Access
ISSN: 2639-8451
Review Article

Addicted to Control or Trying to Control The Addiction? Structures and Mechanisms of OCD - Two Track Conceptualization

Authors: Anat Ben Salmon, Ofer Erez, Anna Cristal-Lilov.

DOI: 10.33425/2639-8451.1021


Abstract

As clinicians specializing in the treatment of patients who suffer from Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD) and those suffering from other anxiety disorders, the Covid 19 pandemic had revealed surprising features of these patients’ coping mechanisms. We observed that while the general population reported an increase in anxiety levels and associated symptoms, patients suffering from OCD reported less anxiety and stress than before the pandemic. While the feeling of uncertainty in almost all life domains was the predominating experience of the general population, OCD patients surprisingly reported experiencing a reduction in stress. As psychotherapists, we were fascinated by this phenomenon and attempted to investigate the origin of this paradox. In this paper, in order to contain the complexity of OCD in both the theory and practice of it’s treatment, we present a two-track approach to the disorder involving the structures and mechanisms of addiction.

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Citation: Anat Ben Salmon, Ofer Erez, Anna Cristal-Lilov. Addicted to Control or Trying to Control The Addiction? Structures and Mechanisms of OCD - Two Track Conceptualization. Addict Res. 2020; 4(2). DOI: 10.33425/2639-8451.1021
Editor-in-Chief
Yury Evgeny Razvodovsky
Yury Evgeny Razvodovsky
Department of Psychiatry | Grodno State Medical University

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