Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Obsessive鈥揅ompulsive Disorder in Children

Cognitive behavioral therapy is often the first treatment recommended by specialists at the Child Study Center, part of Hassenfeld Children鈥檚 Hospital at 觅圈资源站 Langone, for children and adolescents with obsessive鈥揷ompulsive disorder, or OCD. This type of therapy aims to change the child鈥檚 beliefs or behaviors, helping to ease symptoms.

Cognitive behavioral therapy has two components. The cognitive part helps a child change how he or she views a situation, and the behavioral part helps him or her learn how to react differently. The goal is to teach children a variety of coping skills to help them manage difficult situations.

Cognitive Behavioral Therapist with Pediatric Patient

Our specialists work with children to help them recognize obsessive thoughts and avoid engaging in compulsive behavior.

During therapy sessions, your child works with a specially trained therapist at the Child Study Center to learn how his or her thoughts, feelings, and behaviors influence each other. To change unwanted feelings or problematic behaviors, the therapist teaches your child how to respond differently to certain situations. Your child can use the techniques learned during therapy to reduce the effects of OCD in his or her life.

Cognitive behavioral therapy is a short-term treatment approach, typically offered once a week for about 12 to 20 weeks. Therapy for children with more persistent symptoms may last longer.

觅圈资源站 Langone offers intensive cognitive behavioral therapy through the Child Study Center鈥檚 Anxiety and Obsessive鈥揅ompulsive Disorder Treatment Program. Children who may benefit include those experiencing limited response to weekly therapy, school avoidance or refusal, difficulty engaging in daily activities, or high levels of distress at school or in the home due to anxiety. The program may also help children who need quick symptom improvement or lack access to treatment in their area.

Exposure and Response Prevention

Exposure and response prevention is a type of cognitive behavioral therapy effective for treating children and adolescents with obsessive鈥揷ompulsive disorder. It teaches your child to recognize his or her obsessive thoughts and avoid the associated rituals.

During the 鈥渆xposure鈥 part of this therapy, your child slowly and gradually confronts the triggers and thoughts, images, objects, and situations that make him or her anxious. In the 鈥渞esponse prevention鈥 part of therapy, your child learns to avoid engaging in a compulsive behavior after coming into contact with an anxiety trigger.

Over time, children and adolescents learn that the less attention they pay to obsessive thoughts, the less likely these thoughts are to affect them. Moreover, children learn that despite experiencing some distress when confronting triggers and obsessions, the 鈥渂ad things鈥 they worry about don鈥檛 happen.

Exposure and response prevention can be conducted one-on-one in weekly sessions, as well as in an intensive group setting with other children or adolescents who are coping with OCD. Some children feel embarrassed by their symptoms, but the group format enables children to recognize that they鈥檙e not alone in managing OCD.

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