Treating incompleteness in obsessive-compulsive disorder: a meta-analytic review

Publication date: Available online 8 August 2018Source: Journal of Obsessive-Compulsive and Related DisordersAuthor(s): Rachel A. SchwartzAbstractIncompleteness (INC) is a prevalent, impairing subtype of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) in which rituals are performed to counteract “not just right” sensations. Although individuals with INC may be most in need of treatment, conventional OCD interventions emphasize harm avoidance (HA) over INC, contributing to the pervasive assumption that INC is treatment resistant. However, this assumption has not been adequately tested. This paper presents the first meta-analytic investigation of the efficacy of OCD treatments for INC. Thirteen eligible treatments representing 11 papers and 530 participants were identified through PsycInfo and MEDLINE. There was no evidence of publication bias or outliers, and heterogeneity of effect sizes across studies was low-to-moderate. Both uncontrolled (g = 0.57; n = 13 treatments) and controlled (g = 0.44; n = 4 treatments) meta-analyses estimated INC to improve significantly but modestly over treatment. An exploratory meta-analysis synthesizing three studies that measured both HA and INC found that INC and HA improvement did not significantly differ (g = -.04). Moderator analyses revealed that tailoring treatments to INC and using the Obsessive-Compulsive Core Dimensions Questionnaire to measure INC were associated with significantly greater INC improvement. Results suggest that current treatm...
Source: Journal of Obsessive Compulsive and Related Disorders - Category: Psychiatry Source Type: research