An Open Letter to Mental Health Providers

Dear Mental Health Provider,
First, let me say that I commend you for your hard work and dedication to your profession. You have put in countless hours for schooling, clinical hours and for your patients. We, as a society, need you now more than ever.

Earlier today, we said goodbye to many new friends that we met at the 26th annual International Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder Foundation’s (IOCDF) conference. It is hard to describe just how magical the conference was. You are surrounded by so many people – those with OCD, their families, their clinicians – who understand exactly what you are thinking, feeling and going through. My husband, a lifelong OCD sufferer, was hesitant to attend the conference, however within minutes, he felt right at home.

As we met each new friend and began to swap stories, it became crystal clear that many of us shared a similar, tragic tale of misdiagnosis and improper treatment. The quick version of our story is this: at an early age (around 8) my husband started struggling with obsessive thoughts that created anxiety which then lead him to doing rituals or compulsions to try and reduce the anxiety. His compulsions were things like avoiding situations/people/places, excessive hand washing, replacing thoughts, bargaining and neutralizing. These thoughts and behaviors would follow him into his teens, through college and into his adult life. He didn’t seek treatment because he didn’t realize how bad he was and he thought he could handle it on his own.

When I became pregnant with our daughter, his symptoms became worse. I told my husband to seek help, start going to therapy and possibly get on some medication. At this point, Chris knew that he had Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, self-diagnosed, but neither of us knew exactly what that meant. For the next 6 years, he would be in and out of therapy, bouncing from therapist to therapist and be on and off medication. Neither therapy nor the medication seemed to be helping, so staying consistent with either didn’t seem to make sense. By the fall of 2018, Chris’s symptoms had really increased and at the end of October his OCD exploded rendering him unable to care for himself. In what seemed like an instant, my funny, outgoing, life loving husband became incapacitated, paralyzed by crippling fear and all-consuming compulsions.

Chris’s well intended therapist suggested a local outpatient program. Within a day we scheduled a tour and met with the program manager. Justin (his name has been changed) talked us through what the outpatient program would look like. Chris sat next to me, barely able to speak, unable to make eye contact and terrified to touch anything. Justin then went on to explain that the program did not specialize in OCD and that this might be too overwhelming for Chris. Justin suggested that we look into OCD specific care, educate ourselves utilizing the IOCDF’s website and gave us the name of McLean Hospital in Boston, which specialized in OCD specific treatment. In that instant, I went numb. I was caught off guard – there was specific, special treatment for OCD? Justin and I agreed to get Chris on the wait list for the outpatient program as something to try and we headed to the car. Just to further illustrate how bad Chris had gotten, it took us nearly 10 minutes to walk the 100 feet to the car, stopping often to check for possible needles that Chris’s OCD convinced him may have been in his path.

That night after getting Chris to bed, I began my OCD education via the IOCDF website. Within minutes I discovered that there was an evidence-based therapy that is the gold standard treatment for OCD called Exposure Response Prevention (ERP). I used the IOCDF’s search engine to find the names of some local providers.

I will skip ahead to a week later when we had our first appointment with a psychologist who specializes in treating OCD. As we sat in her office (well, Chris was standing because his OCD would not let him sit on the couch), the psychologist who we will call Dr. B, listened to our tale. We explained that Chris had been in and out of therapy for nearly 6 years with therapists who said they could help him with his OCD, yet never employed ERP. Dr. B tried to hide her anger and frustration as she apologized for the pain Chris was in and that he was suffering so much. She tried to give his former therapists the benefit of the doubt. Dr. B reassured us that Chris did not need to suffer this way and that ERP was going to help him, finally – and it absolutely has.

At the conference, we met person after person, all with a similar tale. Some were fortunate to have been diagnosed at an earlier age, yet many still did not receive ERP treatment until years later. According to the International OCD Foundation, on average it takes someone with OCD 14-17 years to receive proper treatment, and we can tell you from personal experience that this is absolutely true. Here is where my plea to you, Dear Mental Health Provider, begins.

While I understand that it is highly unlikely that you learned or even heard about OCD and ERP in your schooling, I am begging you to educate yourself. Yes, it is true that ERP is a form of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), but it has a very specific protocol. Even if you don’t want to offer ERP, at least know enough about OCD to be able to properly diagnose and refer your patient to an OCD specialist who can treat them. Please, don’t tell people that you can help them with their OCD when you have had no specific training in treating this unbelievably complex and debilitating disorder. Please do not employ other forms of therapy which can actually make OCD worse, thereby increasing the suffering of your patient. Please do not tell the insurance company that you treat OCD when in fact you do not, as this makes it harder for true OCD specialists to get into insurance networks.

ERP is an evidence-based treatment – which means there is a ton of data and research proving the efficacy of this treatment for OCD and other anxiety disorders. ERP is not new, as a matter of fact it has been around and used to treat OCD for over 60 years. ERP gave Chris his life back, gave me my husband back and most importantly, gave our daughter her daddy back. I didn’t mention this before, but Chris’s biggest trigger is our daughter. When his OCD was at its worst, despite 6 years of therapy and medication, he couldn’t even stand to be in the same house as her as it was too anxiety provoking. His OCD had convinced him that he was going to do something to make her sick. Our 5-year-old daughter almost lost her daddy because the mental health professionals he had been seeing were not educated on OCD and ERP.

I will end with this, Dear Mental Health Provider- please remember why you entered the mental health profession – I am willing to bet it was to help people. I don’t think you are malicious or meaning to cause harm, but your ignorance and unwillingness to educate yourself is making OCD sufferer’s symptoms worse, is costing them their jobs, their relationships and in all too many cases, their lives. You have a professional, and I think moral, obligation to properly diagnose and treat (or refer) every, single one of your patients. If you truly want to help those with OCD, then please go to www.iocdf.org and sign up for the Behavioral Technical Training Institute (BTTI). Become educated and certified in order to properly give ERP treatment.

We are counting on you, Dear Mental Health Provider. We trust you. Our lives are literally in your hands.

If you are reading this as someone living with OCD as either a sufferer or a loved one, please know that there IS hope and you CAN get better. You are not alone.

Chris and I meeting author, OCD specialist and sufferer Shala Nicely, LPC

11 thoughts on “An Open Letter to Mental Health Providers”

  1. This is an excellent open letter, and I’m going to share it. I’ve seen psychiatrists, psychologists, and even a hypnotist for 43 years. Not one has brought up ERP, yet I’ve known about it for many, many years. I told one psychologist about it, and he asked more about it, then told me to touch the bookshelf behind me. I did, but he didn’t understand why it wasn’t much of a problem for me there. He had no clue what he was doing.

    I’ve been on so many meds, and three or four did well, but they stopped working after awhile. They also caused some health issues for me.

    I’ve done ERP on my own, with minimal success, but it doesn’t work all that well for me. It should be mentioned there are other treatments for OCD, although ERP is the standard.

  2. Jodi, thank you so much for this wonderful article. I am a licensed therapist who faces a similar frustration treating emetophobia (fear of vomiting). Emetophobia affects 7% of the population (over 21 million people in the United States alone) and yet there is little research done on it. I also have a history of this disorder which is closely related to OCD, and often comorbid with OCD. The only way out of it is ERP. I’m 60 years old now so my mission in the next 10 years is to put together training for therapists on how to treat emetophobia. My website, if you’re interested, is http://www.emetophobiahelp.org
    I also host a website specifically for other therapists providing resources for ERP at http://www.emetophobiaresource.org
    I’d love to connect online with you sometime.

    1. Hello Anna,
      Thank you so much for your kind words, the work that you are doing and for sharing these resources. I would love to connect – I will reach out via your website. Thank you again for all that you are doing. I honestly believe that by working together, therapists and sufferers/families, we will be the catalyst for major change.

  3. Thank you for your candid thoughts and words. They echo something I’ve been talking and thinking about a lot lately. We must do a better job in the mental health community of spreading the word that there are best treatments for OCD and that anything less is unacceptable.So glad the conference was good for you guys. I consider it one of my homes. (by the way, I’m a mom of someone with OCD and a psychologist who specializes in treating it now)

    1. Thank you so much for your comment – it means so much coming from someone who understands this issue from both sides. If you have any suggestions on how we can best educate mental health providers, I would love to hear them. We really want to help educate folks about not just OCD, but ERP. Thank you again and I look forward to following your blog!

      1. Hi Jodi, This is my latest quest – educating mental health providers (and those who refer for help – like the pediatricians and general practitioners). I’ve seen a lot of strides in educating about OCD, but clearly more is needed in educating about the appropriate treatment (ERP). It frustrates me to no end when I hear stories of years and years of inappropriate treatment. By the way, you’ve done an amazing job of educating about ERP already. Your post is showing up all over the place (as I’m sure you are aware). Keep making waves. I’m participating in a group of mental health practitioners and OCD advocates who are working to address the issues of educating and also access to treatment, so let’s see what happens there. Also, I’m going to talk with my local psychological association about the issue (we comprise one of the largest psychological associations in the nation so I’m thinking it could have a potential impact). Let’s stay in touch. I’ll follow your blog; you follow mine and let’s go from there. Best – Angie

        1. Angie,
          That is amazing! I am the Vice President of our IOCDF affiliate and I am facilitating the launch a bunch of initiatives aimed at all of this! We are looking to do workshops at schools, hand out educational materials and info on resources to those who refer for help, and more. I am really looking forward to staying connected and making serious change!

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