DSM-5 Criteria for diagnosing OCD:
OCD means having obsessions, compulsions, or both.
Obsessions are defined by both of these aspects:
- Thoughts, impulses, or images that occur over and over again. These thoughts, impulses, or images are unwanted. They cause a lot of anxiety or stress.
- The person who has these thoughts, impulses, or images tries to ignore them or tries to make them go away.
Compulsions are defined by both of these aspects:
Repeated behaviors (for example, handwashing, placing things in a specific order, or checking things over and over, like whether a door is locked) or thoughts (for example, praying, counting, or repeating words silently) over and over again or according to certain rules that must be followed exactly in order to make an obsession go away. The purpose of the behaviors or thoughts is to prevent or reduce distress, or prevent some feared event or situation. However, these behaviors or thoughts either are not connected to reality or clearly are extreme. In addition, the following conditions must be met:- The obsessions or compulsions are time-consuming (take more than an hour a day), or cause extreme distress or significantly interfere with the person’s daily life.
- The symptoms are not due to taking medicine or other drugs, or due to other medical conditions.
- If the person has another disorder at the same time, the obsessions or compulsions cannot be only related to the symptoms of the other disorder. For example, in order to be diagnosed with OCD, a person with an eating disorder must have obsessions or compulsions that are not related just to food.