| Literature DB >> 33867778 |
Hannelore L N Tandt1, Hanna Van Parys1, Lemke Leyman1, Christine Purdon2, Gilbert M D Lemmens1,3.
Abstract
Patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) are likely to be affected by the COVID-19 crisis since fear of contamination is highly prevalent in this illness and disease reminders are omnipresent during this crisis. The current study aimed to investigate the impact of the pandemic and the lockdown on the mental health, well-being and coping abilities of OCD patients and their families in order to increase our understanding of the underlying mechanisms of the disorder. Twenty-two patients and 13 family members were interviewed one-to-one about their experiences and challenges caused by the pandemic and home-confinement directives. Verbatim transcripts of the interviews were analyzed using inductive thematic analysis. Five overarching themes were identified: (1) changing point of reference: confusion and legitimization of OCD behavior, (2) coping strategies were challenged: too much or too little exposure to obsessional concerns, (3) distress but also relief in some areas, (4) developing a new equilibrium within the family, (5) changes in accessibility and nature of therapy: perils and merits of online treatment. These findings make clear the importance of the accessibility of mental health services during this pandemic through direct patient contacts or in a remote format. In therapy therapists should focus on challenging the changing point of reference, providing practical advice on coping, stimulating to engage in exposure and encouraging patients to seek social support. Furthermore, it is important to involve family members in therapy to support and coach them to be validating, supportive and encouraging, without accommodating to the OCD behaviour.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Family accommodation; Lockdown; Obsessive-compulsive disorder; Thematic analysis
Year: 2021 PMID: 33867778 PMCID: PMC8040748 DOI: 10.1007/s12144-021-01724-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Psychol ISSN: 1046-1310
Description of Patients and Family Members Characteristics
| Gender | Female Male | 13 (59.1) 9 (40.9) | 9 (69.2) 4 (30.8) |
| Educational attainment | Secondary school Bachelor’s degree Master’s degree | 13 (59.1) 1 (4.5) 8 (36.8) | 5 (38.5) 5 (38.5) 3 (23.1) |
Employment status | Employed Unemployed (health related) Unemployed Retired Student Other | 5 (22.7) 8 (36.4) 3 (13.6) 1 (4.5) 3 (13.6) 2 (9.1) | 11 (84.6) 0 (0) 0 (0) 1 (7.7) 0 (0) 1 (1.7) |
| Marital status | Single Relationship not living together Practically or common-law living together Married Widowed Separated | 10 (45.5) 2 (9.1) 4 (18.2) 5 (22.7) 0 (0) 1 (4.5) | 2 (15.4) 3 (23.1) 0 (0) 8 (61.5) 0 (0) 0 (0) |
| Living condition | Living together Living alone | 17 (77.3) 5 (22.7) | 13 (100) 0 (0) |
| Children | Children No children | 6 (27.3) 16 (72.7) | |
| Mental health treatment | Current treatment - GP - Psychologist - Psychiatrist - Other No current treatment | 21 (95.5) 5 (23.8) 17 (81) 18 (85.7) 2 (9.5) 1 (4.5) | |
| Type of treatment (past or present) | Medication Psychotherapy - Cognitive Behavioral Therapy - System Therapy - Psychodynamic Therapy - Other Neuromodulation (TMS, DBS, ECT) | 22 (100) 20 (90.9) 19 (95) 3 (15) 2 (10) 4 (20) 12 (54.5) |
The quotes from participants’ interviews grouped by the different reported themes
| The thing is that I wash my hands much more often these days, and now it’s like just right when you do that, because you have to, you have to (Female patient, 62, fear of contamination) | |
| It’s like you have fewer social reference or something, yeah, normality seems to fade away, so uhm, OCD seems to get more space, gets free rein. Instead of when you meet people then unconsciously each time you have some kind of fact check, you know many people don’t have OCD so then you can see, yeah you know, now your point of reference is lost (Male patient, 37, ordering and arranging) | |
| Oh, the corona virus can be on it, you know, and then you should wait two or three days to take up and read your book from the library and all that, you know, I have the impression it gets more of a grip on me that way, so it’s like I have to do exactly these things now I needed to unlearn in the past. (Female patient, 62, fear of contamination) | |
| These days no one would even propose to come by my place, so uhm, very weird yeah, I have the feeling that the government almost facilitates my OCD and tells me ‘you can’t do this and you have to do that’. (Female patient, 36, fear of contamination) | |
| [It] has had a huge impact on my fear of contamination, which was very limited before, and now it returned and it’s much more intense (Female patient, 38, fear of contamination) | |
| But I do feel scared, let’s say when I come to the consultation or something, I wear a lot of layers, being scared like ‘I don’t want to get infected’ (Male patient, 44, fear of contamination) | |
| Did people go out? Did I count correctly? Then the thoughts like ‘there are too many people inside, they all are going to be infected, that’s my fault, how many people will die?’ Uhm, can I control it, I can’t control whether people will die, so that makes it worse. (Male patient, 43, persisting doubting) | |
| Just like, because it’s often about death and uhm, I’m not good at that, and it makes the compulsions increase (Female patient, 26, magical thoughts) | |
| Mostly with regard to hygiene, being clean, uhm, masks, yeah, being scared that an infection enters the house or the family. (Male partner of patient with fear of contamination, 38) | |
| The fear that there would be a contamination, that she would uhm, would come into contact with somebody who is infected, and that she would pass it on to me, so it’s especially not about, about her becoming ill, but the fact that she would pass it on to people around her. (Mother of patient with magical thoughts, 53) | |
| I always say, my job and seeing my friends, that’s part of my exposure, you know, it was my exposure actually (Male patient, 21, sexual intrusive thoughts) | |
| So at the moment, I think it’s pretty ok, my OCD is under control. But I don’t see it clearly, because I also, yeah, I don’t come out so it’s a different safer situation for me. (Male patient, 25, persisting doubting) | |
| I’m afraid that the OCD will be worse when I meet certain people again (Male patient, 21, sexual intrusive thoughts) | |
| While I’m also thinking that when this is all over, I will start thinking ‘oh no, no viruses in the house’, so I’ll have to pay more attention to that again. (Female patient, 62, fear of contamination) | |
| So in general the quarantine isn’t helpful, it keeps the obsessive thoughts going on and on. I lack distraction, so I spend more time dwelling and lingering on a particular thought. (Female patient, 31, fear of contamination) | |
| Obsessive thoughts come up at moments when you’re most lonely, you don’t have anything to do, then they come up. (Male patient, 28, sexual intrusive thoughts) | |
| The OCD increases, because she’s at home more often (…). Uhm, she can engage in compulsive rituals whenever she wants, like yeah, more than ever I guess (laughs). Also, yes, she can’t, she can’t go anywhere except for going for a walk or riding her bike. (Male partner of patient with contamination fears, 38) | |
| Now I’m at home almost all of the time, so for myself, you know, I do wash my hands very often and when I have to wash things, again, yeah doing the laundry used to be a huge problem three years ago, because I needed to wash everything separately in my washing machine or I needed to wash the inside of the washing machine before it could run again, or wash things twice, those are things I see coming back now. (Female patient, 31, fear of contamination) (active avoidance) | |
| Because I still lock myself up in my safe cocoon, being at home, at home and outside, but actually I don’t dare to go on the street at all, I don’t dare to go through the front door, I stay in my own environment. (Female patient, 50, fear of contamination) (passive avoidance) | |
So before corona popped up in the news, I think starting from the middle of February, beginning of February I started to have fears about it, when other people weren’t concerned with it yet. Already at that moment I didn’t go outside anymore and people told me not to exaggerate, it’s, it’s in China. (Female patient, 31, fear of contamination) (passive avoidance) | |
| [So, it didn’t have] a good impact and I decided to keep it at a distance as much as possible, because when I read all those articles, like stupid articles, sometimes I see in the title ‘can I still grab a shopping cart?’ ‘can you touch the door handle?’ How contagious is this and how contagious is that? And in the beginning, I read all of that, but it only resulted in an increase of my fear and it didn’t help me. So it’s better to keep away from the media because it just triggers too many thoughts and acts related to fear of contamination. (Female patient, 31, fear of contamination) | |
| Sometimes I am a little down because you don’t, you don’t have a perspective anymore, like applying for jobs is completely at a standstill, so yeah, you don’t really have the feeling that you get on in life, or that it, everything is at a standstill at the moment. (Female patient, 26, harming thoughts). | |
| A feeling of hopelessness, a feeling like ‘this is never gonna be over’ and that’s very difficult sometimes. Uhm, and it strongly reminds me of an OCD problem, in that I also very often think ‘this is never gonna stop’ when it comes to OCD, there’s no perspective there. (Male patient, 37, ordering and arranging) | |
| People in the media contradict each other, one person says this, the other one says it differently, and that makes him very unsure and he says ‘when this is gonna take much longer I’m afraid I might get a relapse’, that’s something he literally said a couple of days ago. (Mother of patient with sexual intrusive thoughts, 51) | |
| As I’m living on my own, the loneliness is more tangible to me and the situation more concrete (Female patient, 36 fear of contamination) | |
| It’s incredibly hard, so like human contact is not possible, both with friends and family, yes loneliness is coming into play (Female patient, 50, fear of contamination) | |
| So also the feeling of being forgotten somehow, yes, because yeah who cares you know, that I’m sitting here, yes kind of (Male patient, 37, ordering and arranging) | |
| The only good thing is that my weeks are less busy (Female patient, 24, ordering and arranging) | |
| In general, the positive effect it has, things are more quiet, somehow it’s pleasant and there is less obligation to make uhm, to make progress (Male patient, 37, ordering and arranging) | |
| So for him the pressure is gone too. (Female partner of patient with persisting doubting, 28) | |
So luckily, her brother is with her at home, because at other times he is with his girlfriend very often, but now he’s home too, and they get along very well and they laugh together and for her that’s a plus. (Mother of patient with harming thoughts, 62) | |
| They both really like the game, so once in a while we play it, then they say ‘shall we play again?’ And then that’s one hour we do that together, that’s fun. (Mother of patient with magical thoughts, 54) | |
| Sometimes it’s hard to be together in the family 24/7, sometimes that results in tensions (Female patient, 26, harming thoughts) | |
| It’s just the family. And that’s good for the connection between us in the family, you know, in the relationship with my son. But sometimes I’m fed up with it, sometimes I want to be more than a Mum and a housewife. (Female patient, 38, fear of contamination) | |
| Because sometimes we’re too close, too close together, and, and yes, one needs some rest or he sits too close to me, repeating the same thing over and over again, or talking about the compulsion, or this or that, then I think ‘oh gosh’. And I’m the kind of person who needs her space, uhm, that’s the way it is. (Female patient, 41, of patient with persisting doubting) | |
I make clear to him often like ‘B., try to wash your hands for a shorter period of time, try this, try that’ (Mother of patient with fear of contamination, 51) | |
| I tell her not to be on Facebook all the time, where you see everything, I tell her ‘you have to, just leave it like…’ (Male partner of patient with fear of contamination, 63) | |
| Sometimes I tell her ‘stop it, enough’, sometimes, than she’s often angry with me, but afterwards she’s happy and she thanks me. (Male partner of patient with fear of contamination, 38) | |
| G it’s just the OCD, come on: no. (Mother of patient with magical thoughts, 53) | |
| Because I’m pretty occupied with it, and I think it’s remarkable because that way it’s a lot easier to empathize with him. (Female partner of patient with persisting doubting, 28) | |
| I don’t make a fuss when I notice the umpteenth pair of trousers in the laundry and then I think: ‘ok yes, with corona I understand, even for us it‘s you know, for us too it is, you’d get OCD right away so to say’. (Mother of patient with contamination fears, 51) | |
| His sister came to me now and then, asking me ‘how is N. doing’? ‘would it bother him a lot? Or sometimes she said ‘Mum, try not to uhm, show your own fears… ‘She was worried about me but also about her brother. (Mother of patient with sexual intrusive thought, 51) | |
| So I try to reassure her saying ‘I try my best not to get infected, because I know I’m at risk. (Male partner of patient with contamination fears, 38) | |
| I’m pretty scared myself, not in general but at my job I am, because there’s an outbreak at work. Uhm rules aren’t followed so strictly. So yeah, for myself I try to uhm, but yeah, I’m not gonna talk a lot about that to her, well yeah now she’s next to me, because I know for her it’s, you know, yeah, I learn to sail right? There’s no other way, it’s the same for everyone. (Mother of patient with magical thoughts, 52) | |
| Well, it’s clear that she’s avoiding the news, she stopped watching because she preferred not to know. She avoided it, so I myself didn’t bring it up explicitly or when I heard someone or someone in my environment uhm. To the contrary in fact, I tried to, even I’m not so scared, but I tried to put things into perspective even more, to make her feel more at ease. (Mother of patient with magical thoughts, 53) | |
| But now, in that situation I’ve taken over, sometimes I stop her. (Male partner of patient with fear of contamination, 38) | |
| I’m, I’m the one who does the groceries, because she doesn’t dare to go out, so yeah, someone needs to go out right? (Male partner of patient with contamination fear, 55) | |
| When F. comes home, it’s mostly like me making him do things, because it then enters our house and yeah that’s the safe space for me so, then he comes in and he knows that when he hasn’t disinfected his hands and he touches the door knob, he should disinfect the handle afterwards, so after he washed his hands and put his clothes in the laundry. (female patient, 31, fear of contamination) | |
| My daughter has a very difficult time, she can’t turn to anybody and both me and her found it really hard. She felt a bit abandoned I might say. (Mother of patient with magical thoughts, 53) | |
| Somehow, I have the feeling that when it comes to people with mental health problems, these people are put on hold more easily in one way or another. Or that it’s seen as less urgent compared to someone with a physical problem. It’s still, I think it’s often underestimated. (Mother of patient with magical thoughts, 53) | |
| Of course, it’s different to see each other via a screen, uhm, and sometimes that increases the feeling of loneliness I feel, because you, yeah, the contact with the therapist, that is so important. (Female patient, 24, ordering and arranging) | |
| I do think it’s completely different to have a conversation via a webcam compared to face to face, because in face to face contact there’s more emotion, yeah (Female patient, 26, harming thoughts) | |
| Seeing a psychologist is also part of my therapy, it’s about going there, having the conversation, tape recording everything, making notes, than driving to the city to have a coffee and reread everything, then I’m on my own (Male patient, 21, sexual intrusive thoughts) | |
| When it’s the day of your consultation and that’s a possibility, she gains a lot of time. (Mother of patient with magical thoughts, 54) | |
| I think it’s ok, I think it’s very relaxing in a way, because I can talk to her from my own room. (Male patient, 21, fear of contamination) |