BJPsychBulletin
latest
  • 2022
  • 2021
  • 2020
  • 2019
  • 2018
  • 2017
    • The access and waiting-time standard for first-episode psychosis: an opportunity for identification and treatment of psychosis risk states?
    • Plans, hopes and ideas for mental health
    • Capacity in vacuo: an audit of decision-making capacity assessments in a liaison psychiatry service
    • Personality disorder: still the patients psychiatrists dislike?
    • Pokorny’s complaint: the insoluble problem of the overwhelming number of false positives generated by suicide risk assessment
    • Juvenile delinquency, welfare, justice and therapeutic interventions: a global perspective
    • ‘Doc, can I fly to Australia?’ A case report and review of delirium following long-haul flight
    • Mental capacity and borderline personality disorder
    • Perceptual distortions and deceptions: what computers can teach us
    • Adherence to medication in the community: audit cycle of interventions to improve the assessment of adherence
    • Training in quality improvement for the next generation of psychiatrists
    • The most important things I have learnt in my career as a psychiatrist
    • Dudleigh Oscar (John) Topp FRCPsych, MBBS, MFCM, DPM
    • Anthony Carl (Tony) Kaeser FRCP, FRCPsych
    • Klaus Minde MD FRCP(C)
    • College Members whose deaths were reported at Council meetings between October 2015 and October 2016
    • A Practical Guide to the Mental Capacity Act 2005: Putting the Principles of the Act into Practice
    • A Clinician’s Brief Guide to the Mental Capacity Act (2nd edn)
    • Motivational Interviewing: A Guide for Medical Trainees
    • Waking Up: Searching for Spirituality without Religion
    • Deconstructing the OSCE
    • Schizophrenics can be good mothers too
    • Epistemic injustice in psychiatry
    • Psychiatry and the geriatric syndromes – creating constructive interfaces
    • Police liaison and section 136: comparison of two different approaches
    • Online media reporting of suicides: analysis of adherence to existing guidelines
    • Caregiver burden and distress following the patient’s discharge from psychiatric hospital
    • Unlocking an acute psychiatric ward: the impact on unauthorised absences, assaults and seclusions
    • Psychiatry trainees’ experiences of cognitive–behavioural therapy training in a UK deanery: a qualitative analysis
    • Antipsychotic prescribing of consultant forensic psychiatrists working in different levels of secure care with patients with schizophrenia
    • Niemann–Pick type C disease – the tip of the iceberg? A review of neuropsychiatric presentation, diagnosis and treatment
    • The mini-PAT as a multi-source feedback tool for trainees in child and adolescent psychiatry: assessing whether it is fit for purpose
    • James Patrick Watson MD, FRCP, FRCPsych
    • Irving Gottesman
    • The Other Side of Silence: A Psychiatrist’s Memoir of Depression
    • Mentalisation-Based Group Therapy (MBT-G): A Theoretical, Clinical, and Research Manual
    • The Narcissist Next Door. Understanding the Monster in Your Family, in Your Office, in Your Bed – in Your World
    • The Vegetarian
    • The Psychedelic Policy Quagmire: Health, Law, Freedom, and Society
    • Spirituality and Narrative in Psychiatric Practice: Stories of Mind and Soul
    • Big data in mental health research – do the ns justify the means? Using large data-sets of electronic health records for mental health research
    • Vitamin D deficiency in adolescents in a tier 4 psychiatric unit
    • Adherence to NICE guidance on lifestyle advice for people with schizophrenia: a survey
    • Are men under-treated and women over-treated with antidepressants? Findings from a cross-sectional survey in Sweden
    • An analysis of whether a working-age ward-based liaison psychiatry service requires the input of a liaison psychiatrist
    • Civil and forensic patients in secure psychiatric settings: a comparison
    • Known unknowns and unknown unknowns in suicide risk assessment: evidence from meta-analyses of aleatory and epistemic uncertainty
    • Drug information update. Unconventional treatment strategies for schizophrenia: polypharmacy and heroic dosing
    • Should compulsory admission to hospital be part of suicide prevention strategies?
    • Improving the quality of mental health services using patient outcome data: making the most of HoNOS
    • Personalisation and social care assessment – the Care Act 2014
    • Dr Robert George (Rob) Jones FRCPsych
    • Mental Health in the Digital Age: Grave Dangers, Great Promise
    • MCQs in Psychiatry for Medical Students
    • Falls in Scottish homicide: lessons for homicide reduction in mental health patients
    • Evaluation of the 13-item Hypomania Checklist and a brief 3-item manic features questionnaire in primary care
    • Flexible assertive community treatment (FACT) model in specialist psychosis teams: an evaluation
    • Burnout and psychiatric morbidity among doctors in the UK: a systematic literature review of prevalence and associated factors
    • The impact of transforming care on the care and safety of patients with intellectual disabilities and forensic needs
    • Prevent: what is pre-criminal space?
    • Drug information update. Atypical antipsychotics and neuroleptic malignant syndrome: nuances and pragmatics of the association
    • Drug information update. Lithium and chronic kidney disease: debates and dilemmas
    • Shared decision-making in medication management: development of a training intervention
    • Trainee experiences of intellectual disability psychiatry and an innovative leaderless support group: a qualitative study
    • Scottish independence: the view of psychiatry from Edinburgh
    • Handbook on Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders
    • Shrink Wrapped: Tales from Psychiatrists
    • Service user perspectives on coercion and restraint in mental health
    • Patient safety and quality of care in mental health: a world of its own?
    • A Devil’s dictionary for mental health
    • Personality disorder services in England: findings from a national survey
    • Perceptions and knowledge of antipsychotics among mental health professionals and patients
    • Mental capacity legislation in the UK: systematic review of the experiences of adults lacking capacity and their carers
    • Does the cognitive therapy of depression rest on a mistake?
    • The cognitive therapy of depression rests on substantial theoretical, empirical and clinical foundations: a reply to Dr Gipps
    • Suicide patterns on the London Underground railway system, 2000–2010
    • Psychiatric neurosurgery in the 21st century: overview and the growth of deep brain stimulation
    • Teaching provision for old age psychiatry in medical schools in the UK and Ireland: a survey
    • Profile: Derek Summerfield – politics and psychiatry
    • Paul Haydon Rogers FRCP FRCPsych
    • Costas Stefanis MD
    • Kurt Schapira MD FRCP FRCPsych DPM
    • Women in Academic Psychiatry: A Mind to Succeed
    • Mental health law across the UK†
    • Newspaper depictions of mental and physical health
    • Implementation of a novel primary care pathway for patients with severe and enduring mental illness
    • National survey of training of psychiatrists on advance directives to refuse treatment in bipolar disorder
    • Assessing the second-hand effects of a new no-smoking policy in an acute mental health trust
    • A service evaluation of outcomes in two in-patient recovery units
    • Weekend new patient reviews in psychiatry: evaluation of activity over 3 months
    • New models of care: a liaison psychiatry service for medically unexplained symptoms and frequent attenders in primary care
    • Systematic review into factors associated with the recruitment crisis in psychiatry in the UK: students’, trainees’ and consultants’ views
    • Mental Capacity Act (Northern Ireland) 2016†
    • Measuring relational security in forensic mental health services
    • Profile. The constant psychiatrist: an interview with Michael Kopelman
    • Handbook of Secure Care
  • 2016
  • 2015
BJPsychBulletin
  • »
  • 2017 »
  • Handbook on Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders
  • Edit on GitHub

Handbook on Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders

Lynne M. Drummond 1

date

2017-8

Contents

  • Handbook on Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders

This multi-author book examines the disorders categorised in DSM-5 as obsessive-compulsive and related disorders (OCaRDs) and also covers two other related disorders: illness anxiety and obsessive-compulsive personality disorders. The text is written by experts in the field, many of whom were instrumental in developing the concept of OCaRDs in DSM-5. Unlike many multi-author publications, this is brief and to the point. Each of the chapters is arranged in a structured format which includes a general introduction; diagnostic criteria and symptomatology; epidemiology; comorbidity; course and prognosis; psychosocial impairment; developmental considerations; gender-related issues; cultural aspects of phenomenology; assessment and differential diagnosis; aetiology and pathophysiology; treatment (somatic as well as cognitive and behavioural) and a summary of key points at the end. Most chapters also contain illustrative case vignettes which demonstrate the disorders and their potential severity.

This excellent title should be on the bookshelf of every psychiatrist, whether working with adults or children. Mental health workers, managers and commissioners often overlook common conditions such as obsessive-compulsive disorder and body dysmorphic disorder, regarding them as less severe and important than conditions such as schizophrenia. This work describes the hugely detrimental effects these conditions can have on the individual’s mortality, morbidity and social functioning. It also considers newly defined disorders, such as hoarding and skin-picking disorders. These conditions are poorly understood and have generally not been researched extensively. They do, however, appear to be widespread and often have extreme consequences on the individual’s mental and physical well-being. For example, hoarding disorder, which was previously often classified as obsessive-compulsive disorder or else obsessive-compulsive personality disorder, may affect up to 6% of the adult population. Excessive hoarding can lead to death due to fire risk or the falling of large numbers of possessions resulting in an avalanche. It also frequently coexists with self-neglect and – owing to the extreme shame – social isolation. Nevertheless, few community mental health teams in the UK offer comprehensive treatment for hoarding disorders. Some enlightened councils have developed hoarding protocols incorporating housing agencies, social services, and mental and physical health services but overall these are patchy and rare.

Hopefully, heightened awareness will lead to systematic research and a better understanding of the disorders and their treatment, as well as the development of effective services. This handbook would be a perfect introduction to these areas for a busy practitioner seeking brief but authoritative information.

1

Lynne M. Drummond, Consultant Psychiatrist and Clinical Lead, National and Trustwide Services for OCD/BDD, South West London and St George’s NHS Trust, London, UK; email: lynnemd@sgul.ac.uk

Copyright Notice

Articles published from BJPsych Bulletin are open-access, published under the terms of creative commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

The Authors own the copyrights to the individual articles.

Previous Next

© Copyright . Revision 2438ac4a.

Built with Sphinx using a theme provided by Read the Docs.