What Might Parents Notice?
Many kids have OCD for a while before parents, teachers, or doctors realize it.
Parents might only learn about the OCD if their child tells them, or if they notice
the child seems overly worried or is doing behaviors that seem like rituals.
Sometimes, parents may notice other difficulties that can be a result of OCD. For
example, OCD can cause kids to:
- have trouble concentrating on schoolwork, or enjoying activities
- feel and act irritable, upset, sad, or anxious
- seem unsure of whether things are OK
- have trouble deciding or choosing
- take much too long to do everyday tasks, like getting dressed, organizing a backpack,
completing homework, or taking a shower
- get upset and lose their temper if they can't make something perfect or if something
is out of place
- insist that a parent say or do something an exact way
How Is OCD Diagnosed?
To diagnose OCD, you'll meet with a child psychologist or psychiatrist, who will
interview you and your child to learn more details. You and your child also may fill
out checklists and questionnaires. These will help the psychologist or psychiatrist
make a diagnosis. There are no lab tests to diagnose OCD.
When OCD is diagnosed, it can be a relief to kids and parents. OCD can get better
with the right attention and care.
How Is OCD Treated?
OCD is treated with medicine and therapy. For kids who need medicines, doctors
give SSRIs (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors), like Zoloft, Prozac, and Luvox.
Therapists treat OCD with cognitive behavioral therapy. During this kind of talk-and-do
therapy, kids learn about OCD and begin to understand it better. They learn that doing
rituals keeps OCD going strong, and that not doing rituals helps to weaken OCD. They
learn ways to face fears, cope with them, and resist doing rituals. Learning these
skills helps stop the cycle of OCD.
Part of treatment is coaching parents on how they can help kids get better. Parents
learn how to respond to OCD situations, and how to support their child's progress
without giving in to rituals.
What Can Parents Do?
Talk with your child about what's going on. Talk supportively,
listen, and show love. Say something that works for your child's situation like, "I
notice you worry about your covers being smooth, your socks being even, and your shoes
lined up. I notice it gets you stressed if you can't fix things just so."
Say that something called OCD might be causing the worry and the fixing. Tell your
child that a checkup with a doctor can find out if this is what's going on. Reassure
your child that this can get better, and that you want to help.
Make an appointment with a child psychiatrist or psychologist.
Your child's doctor can help you find the right person.
Take part in your child's therapy. Learn all you can about how
parents can help when their child has OCD. Overcoming OCD is a process. There will
be many therapy appointments, and it's important to go to them all. Practice the things
the therapist recommends. Encourage your child.
Get support, and give it. There are lots of resources and support
for parents and families dealing with OCD. Knowing that you're not alone can help
you cope. Sharing success stories with other parents can give you hope and confidence.