Evidence-based practice suggests that clinicians should integrate the best available research with clinical judgment and patient values. Treatment of religious patients with scrupulosity provides a paradigmatic example of such integration. The purpose of this study is to describe potential adaptations to make exposure and response prevention, the first-line treatment for obsessive–compulsive disorder, acceptable and consistent with the values of members of the Ultra-Orthodox Jewish community. We believe that understanding these challenges will enhance the clinician\u27s ability to increase patient motivation and participation in therapy and thereby provide more effective treatment for these and other religious patients
An array of past religiosity-OCD (obsessive-compulsive disorder) studies were conducted, which yield...
The study examined the relationship between religion and symptoms of psychopathology, particularly o...
This paper explores the relationship between religion and obsessive–compulsive dis- order (OCD), wit...
Evidence-based practice suggests that clinicians should integrate the best available research with c...
Scrupulosity, the obsessional fear of thinking or behaving immorally or against one\u27s religious b...
Perceptions of psychological symptoms may be influenced by religiousness, particularly when symptom ...
Scrupulosity is emerging as a recognized subtype of Ob-sessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) pertaining ...
This paper explores the relationship between religion and obsessive–compulsive dis-order (OCD), with...
Objectives: Scrupulosity is a relatively common but understudied subtype of obsessive-compulsive dis...
AbstractReligious themes commonly feature in religious (OCD) patients. Many investigators believed t...
Scrupulosity is a phenomenon of the intersection between religiosity and obsessive-compulsive disord...
Individuals with scrupulosity prototypically have excessive religious fears or doubts about sin; how...
Religiosity has been frequently linked to obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), as religious obsessio...
Background and Objectives: Thought-action fusion (TAF), or maladaptive cognitions regarding the rela...
This paper is a review of the scientific literature regarding the topic of the function of religious...
An array of past religiosity-OCD (obsessive-compulsive disorder) studies were conducted, which yield...
The study examined the relationship between religion and symptoms of psychopathology, particularly o...
This paper explores the relationship between religion and obsessive–compulsive dis- order (OCD), wit...
Evidence-based practice suggests that clinicians should integrate the best available research with c...
Scrupulosity, the obsessional fear of thinking or behaving immorally or against one\u27s religious b...
Perceptions of psychological symptoms may be influenced by religiousness, particularly when symptom ...
Scrupulosity is emerging as a recognized subtype of Ob-sessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) pertaining ...
This paper explores the relationship between religion and obsessive–compulsive dis-order (OCD), with...
Objectives: Scrupulosity is a relatively common but understudied subtype of obsessive-compulsive dis...
AbstractReligious themes commonly feature in religious (OCD) patients. Many investigators believed t...
Scrupulosity is a phenomenon of the intersection between religiosity and obsessive-compulsive disord...
Individuals with scrupulosity prototypically have excessive religious fears or doubts about sin; how...
Religiosity has been frequently linked to obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), as religious obsessio...
Background and Objectives: Thought-action fusion (TAF), or maladaptive cognitions regarding the rela...
This paper is a review of the scientific literature regarding the topic of the function of religious...
An array of past religiosity-OCD (obsessive-compulsive disorder) studies were conducted, which yield...
The study examined the relationship between religion and symptoms of psychopathology, particularly o...
This paper explores the relationship between religion and obsessive–compulsive dis- order (OCD), wit...