Integrating Videoconferencing Into Treatment for Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder: Practical Strategies With Case Examples
Abstract
Videoconferencing-Assisted OCD Treatment: Potential Strategies
Hybrid EX/RP.
Case and background | Presentation | Treatment courseb | Patient comments |
---|---|---|---|
1A. 34-year-old woman requesting EX/RP | Primary obsessions: fear of illness, disgust following perceived contamination. Primary compulsions: ritualized showering, avoiding contact with most surfaces. | Pretreatment YBOCS: 32. Patient completed 12 in-person EX/RP sessions and two videoconferencing-assisted home visits. Exposures: touching toilet seats in office restrooms, imagining strangers’ urine. Midtreatment YBOCS: 19. Transitioned to fully remote to reduce patient’s burden of arranging child care. Patient completed five videoconferencing-assisted sessions, modifying exposures as needed (e.g., touching toilet seats at home, including possible dried urine). Posttreatment YBOCS: 10. | “Scheduling was much easier without having to find a sitter.” |
1B. 22-year-old woman requesting EX/RP | Primary obsessions: fears of contracting STIs and causing fires. Primary compulsions: researching STI symptoms, reassurance-seeking, checking appliances. | Pretreatment YBOCS: 28. Patient completed 10 in-person EX/RP sessions. Exposures: reading health-related articles, leaving appliances plugged in, imagining contracting STIs. Midtreatment YBOCS: 11. Transitioned to fully remote during COVID-19. Patient completed six videoconferencing-assisted sessions including similar exposures heightened by using home environment (e.g., leaving stove on). Posttreatment YBOCS: 6. | “Doing exposures at home felt more real because that’s where my fears usually came up.” |
2A. 30-year-old woman requesting remote EX/RP | Primary obsessions: fear of self-harm, “just-right” concerns. Primary compulsions: repeating behaviors (e.g., entering/exiting doorways). | Pretreatment YBOCS: 24. Patient completed 16 videoconferencing-assisted sessions. Exposures: reading articles about suicide, writing the word “suicide,” removing objects from “just-right” positions. Posttreatment YBOCS: 3. | “I live upstate, 2 hours from the closest EX/RP therapist. Teletherapy has been lifesaving.” |
2B. 28-year-old man requesting remote EX/RP during COVID-19 | Primary obsessions: fear of homosexuality, perfectionism. Primary compulsions: mental reviewing, reassurance-seeking, rereading/rewriting. | Pretreatment YBOCS: 21. Patient completed 16 videoconferencing-assisted sessions. Exposures: writing “I’m gay,” reading articles about gay celebrities, intentionally making typographical errors. Posttreatment YBOCS: 8. | “I was nervous about being judged for these thoughts. Teletherapy seemed less intimidating.” |
3. 30-year-old man requesting remote medication treatment during COVID-19 | Primary obsessions: fears about dirt and germs, disgust following perceived contamination. Primary compulsions: excessive handwashing, showering. Medications: Escitalopram 20 mg/day, previously prescribed. | Pretreatment YBOCS: 33. Escitalopram titrated to 40 mg/day, maintained for 6 weeks. Midtreatment YBOCS: 27. Patient reported reduced libido and minimal benefit, prompting cross-titration to sertraline 400 mg. Over subsequent 8 weeks, low libido resolved, and OCD symptoms improved. Posttreatment YBOCS: 15. | “I couldn’t do weekly meetings, and with COVID, exposures felt unsafe. Thankfully, remote medication treatment was an option.” |
4. 37-year-old woman requesting OCD treatment after voluntary hospitalization for OCD | Primary obsessions: fears of developing incurable illnesses, being a pedophile, and harming herself/family. Primary compulsions: body-scanning, mental reviewing, reassurance-seeking. Medications (started in hospital 30 days prior): sertraline 100 mg/day, aripiprazole 5 mg/day, N-acetylcysteine 2,400 mg/day. | Pretreatment YBOCS: 33. Patient completed eight in-person EX/RP/psychopharmacology sessions. Sertraline increased to 200 mg/day and N-acetylcysteine to 3,600 mg/day; aripiprazole discontinued because of akathisia. Exposures: watching television shows featuring children, reading about patients with neurological illnesses. Midtreatment YBOCS: 22. Patient completed eight additional in-person treatment sessions. She also joined a weekly videoconferencing-assisted OCD support group, comprising patients from several countries with diverse OCD symptoms. Posttreatment YBOCS: 14. | “Hearing that I wasn’t alone made me feel less ashamed and more self-confident.” |
5. 22-year-old man requesting EX/RP at no cost | Primary obsessions: fears of causing harm to himself and to others. Primary compulsions: checking ovens/outlets, avoiding self-harm–related stimuli (rooftops, knives). | Pretreatment YBOCS: 19. Patient completed eight in-person EX/RP sessions with a trainee, who met weekly with a supervising psychologist. Exposures: approaching cliffs/rooftops, holding knives. Midtreatment YBOCS: 17. Treatment and weekly supervision transitioned to videoconferencing during COVID-19. With patient consent, the supervisor occasionally provided live in-session feedback. Modified exposures included approaching patient’s open seventh-floor window. Posttreatment YBOCS: 10. | “I already use [software] for work, so tele-meetings with different people felt normal.” |
Fully remote EX/RP.
Videoconferencing-assisted psychopharmacology.
Virtual support groups.
Videoconferencing-assisted clinical supervision.
Discussion and Future Directions
Supplementary Material
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