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Integrated Care for OCD and Substance Abuse

Managing Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) alone is challenging, but when OCD is experienced with Substance Use Disorder, it can create an even more complex cycle. Many people with OCD use alcohol or substances to cope with intrusive thoughts or overwhelming anxiety, which can intensify symptoms over time. And while substances may provide temporary relief, they can easily become a major issue on their own.

Knowing the relationship between OCD and substance use is the first step to successful rehabilitation. By utilizing a combined (or integrated) approach, individuals can achieve a reduction in compulsive behavior, an improved ability to manage their OCD induced anxiety, and a much greater ability to achieve a stable foundation for long-term recovery and well-being.

At Meridian Recovery, we understand how severe both OCD and substance use disorder can be. That is why we offer integrated dual diagnosis treatment to people with both OCD and a substance use disorder.

What Is OCD?

Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is a mental health condition characterized by two different components: obsessions and compulsions.[1] 

Obsessions are intrusive thoughts, images, or urges that cause distress and are difficult to get rid of. Compulsions are repetitive behaviors or mental processes that occur as a result of those obsessive thoughts, done to relieve the anxiety created by the obsessions or prevent a feared negative outcome. 

The American Psychiatric Association classifies OCD as a clinically significant psychiatric disorder that is time-consuming, causes distress, and can significantly disrupt daily life and damage personal relationships and job performance.[2] Approximately 2 to 3% of the general population is diagnosed with OCD; however, without professional assistance, the symptoms will typically continue and may worsen over time.[3]

 

Common Signs and Symptoms of OCD

People who experience OCD typically experience the following patterns:

Common Obsessions

  • Fear of contamination or illness
  • Unwanted aggressive, sexual, or religious intrusive thoughts
  • Fear of injuring themselves or someone else
  • An intense need for symmetry, order, or exactness
  • Fear of losing control

Common Compulsive Behaviors

  • Excessive cleaning or handwashing
  • Checking behaviors such as locks, appliances, or safety
  • Counting, arranging, or ordering objects in a specific way
  • Repeatedly seeking reassurance from others
  • Mental rituals such as reviewing or neutralizing distressing thoughts

At Meridian Recovery, we provide integrated dual diagnosis treatment for individuals living with co-occurring OCD and substance use disorder. We do not treat mental health conditions as a standalone service. All mental health care is delivered exclusively within dual diagnosis treatment, meaning your OCD and substance use disorder are addressed together by a coordinated clinical team.

If you or someone you know is faced with the dual challenge of OCD and substance use that have become intertwined, you deserve care that treats the full picture.

Reach out to Meridian Recovery today for a confidential conversation with our admissions team.

OCD and Substance Abuse


There is a well-established relationship between obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and co-occurring substance use disorders (SUDs). A large study published in 2022 in JAMA Network Open indicates a 3.7-times increased risk of substance abuse among OCD patients versus the general population.[4] 

One of the major reasons for this association is that people with OCD use substances to self-medicate.[5] Alcohol, cannabis, and opioids can temporarily reduce anxiety and obsessive thinking. Eventually, however, substance use has a negative effect on the underlying OCD condition, increasing impulsive behavior and creating a new cycle of craving and withdrawal that adds to their distress.

The relationship between OCD and substance abuse is bidirectional and complicated. Using substances will reduce obsessive-compulsive symptoms for a short period of time, but in the long term, it continues to reinforce substance abuse, interferes with the serotonin system (which is thought to be involved in the development of OCD), increases the degree of impulsivity that makes resisting compulsions and cravings more difficult, and worsens anxiety and intrusive thoughts during withdrawal.[6] 

Because of this, treating OCD and addiction as separate disorders typically does not work.



OCD and Alcohol Abuse

Alcohol is the most commonly used substance abused by people with OCD.[7] Alcohol is often used to self-medicate for chronic anxiety and intrusive thoughts because it produces calming effects, which interrupt obsessive thoughts and reduce the need to perform compulsive behaviors. 

However, the effects of alcohol are short-lived. Alcohol interferes with sleep, which reduces the cognitive control required to handle obsessive thoughts, and produces very high levels of anxiety when a person stops drinking, which can greatly exacerbate obsessive-compulsive symptoms.[8] For people with both OCD and alcohol abuse, dual diagnosis treatment that addresses both the neurobiological and psychological aspects of OCD and SUD is critical for continued recovery.

 

Compulsive Behavior vs. Addiction

Both OCD and addiction involve repetitive behaviors that are hard to control. As a result of this similarity, some people wonder whether they are experiencing one condition, the other, or both. It is important to understand the difference because it affects treatment.

A person with OCD has compulsive behaviors because of anxiety, and they engage in the behaviors to prevent some type of threatened consequence. They do not enjoy the compulsive behaviors that they perform, but the anxiety they experience when thinking about not performing the behaviors is so overwhelming that they cannot stop performing them.

In contrast, a person with addiction initially engages in substance use for the rewards and pleasures associated with it. They want to experience the high, the energy, or the calming effects produced by the drug, or may be consuming them to avoid withdrawal symptoms. Many people with OCD also have a substance use disorder because they were using substances to self-medicate, and, over time, they become physiologically and psychologically dependent on them. 

When a person is suffering from both conditions, both conditions require attention from a qualified mental health professional. If only one condition is treated, the other can make recovery more difficult and increase the risk that symptoms will continue or return over time.

Is there a link between OCD and addiction?

Yes, research suggests that people who have OCD are at a greater risk of developing a substance abuse disorder when compared to the general population. Many people who have OCD self-medicate with alcohol or other types of substances to help temporarily cope with the anxiety caused by their intrusive thoughts or to quiet the need to perform their compulsive behaviors. Over time, this pattern can produce a full-blown substance use disorder, which requires its own level of clinical treatment.

What substances make OCD worse?

Alcohol tends to produce an increase in OCD symptoms because of its disruption of sleep, its effect on increasing anxiety during withdrawal, and the impairment of cognitive control functions needed to manage intrusive thoughts. Cocaine and amphetamines can also lead to an increase in anxiety and obsessive thinking. Some people experience an increase in anxiety and intrusive thoughts when consuming marijuana, especially with high-level THC products.

Is OCD like a drug addiction?

There are surface-level similarities, such as excessive repetition of a behavior despite negative consequences. However, these two disorders are not clinically the same. A person with OCD is performing compulsive acts due to anxiety and the need to prevent a specific outcome, whereas a person with an addiction performs a behavior initially because of the positive reinforcement received from the use of drugs or alcohol.

Do people with OCD relapse?

OCD is referred to as a chronic condition that can get better or worse, and many will experience acute periods of increased symptoms, especially during stress. When a person has a dual diagnosis, a relapse in either area could result in increased symptoms of the other disorder. This is what makes ongoing support and aftercare planning so vital once treatment is completed.

What co-occurring mental illnesses are most common in people who have OCD?

The most common mental illnesses that a person who has OCD will experience are anxiety disorders or mood disorders. It is also common for people who suffer from OCD to have been exposed to trauma.

What is the root cause of OCD?

There is no one known cause, but biological, genetic, and environmental factors all increase the risk. Neuroimaging studies indicate that people who have OCD have differing brain circuitry, and the dysregulation of serotonin is theorized to be a factor. Environmental causes such as trauma or stress can trigger the development of symptoms among those who are biologically predisposed.

Sources

[1] National Institute of Mental Health. (n.d.). Obsessive-compulsive disorder: When unwanted thoughts or repetitive behaviors take over.

https://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/publications/obsessive-compulsive-disorder-when-unwanted-thoughts-or-repetitive-behaviors-take-over

[2] American Psychiatric Association. (n.d.). Obsessive-compulsive disorder.

https://www.psychiatry.org/patients-families/obsessive-compulsive-disorder

[3] National Institute of Mental Health. (n.d.). Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) statistics.

https://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/statistics/obsessive-compulsive-disorder-ocd

[4] [5] [7] Virtanen, S., Kuja-Halkola, R., Sidorchuk, A., et al. (2022). Association of obsessive-compulsive disorder and obsessive-compulsive symptoms with substance misuse in two longitudinal cohorts in Sweden. JAMA Network Open, 5(6), e2214779.

https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2793020

[6] [8] Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. (2016). Obsessive-compulsive disorder and substance use disorders.

https://library.samhsa.gov/sites/default/files/sma16-4977.pdf