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Published byLily Walsh Modified over 8 years ago
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This is a condition in which a person is preoccupied with rules, orderliness, and control.
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Feel as if they can never make a decision. Get caught up in a worried style. Loose concern on things that are important and start to believe they aren’t important Get annoyed with themselves and people around them.
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They seem to never be able to finish projects because they want every little detail to be perfect. Manage their life with schedules. When in a meeting they insist on sitting people in alphabetical order. Refuse to start a meeting until is it the exact second it should start.
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DSM-IV-TR Criteria › Perfectionism › Rigidity › Stubbornness › Miserliness According to the DSM-IV-TR, this disorder worsens later in life such as adulthood because they feel as if they need more control over the environment and other things around them.
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Causes of are likely due to biological and genetic factors. Another cause for this disorder can be from when a child such as the environment they were in and how they were treated as a child. How parents interacted with there early development.
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Most people with this disorder do not seek for help. The forms of treatment you receive for this type of condition would be: › Long term Psychotherapy Which helps the client understand their feelings and talk about it instead of hiding them. › Medications Such as provac. helps with anxiety and depression.
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› Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy(CBT) Examines the clients thought process For example, they do an activity called thought stopping. This reduces the amount of time spent on worries.
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Possible complications are: › Anxiety › Depression › Difficulty moving forward in career situations › Relationship Difficulties This condition prevents complications with drug abuse, which are common in other personality disorders, but they have issues handling their anger and social interaction with others.
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This disorder tends to happen in families passed down in genes. But mostly occurs to men within the family.
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http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/000942.htm http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/000942.htm http://www.nlm.nih.gov/pubmedhealth/PMH001938 http://www.nlm.nih.gov/pubmedhealth/PMH001938 http://pyschcentral.com/disorders/sx26.htm http://pyschcentral.com/disorders/sx26.htm
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What is the difference between obsessive compulsive personality disorder and obsessive compulsive disorder? Explain.
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