Ocd Disease - Does It Really Harm An Ocd Suffer That Much?

By:




Statistics has been open about the fact that one out of five Americans suffer from OCD or Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, however, many people still remain oblivious about it. Perhaps this lack of interest of the society to find out more about OCD and sympathize to sufferers is also due to the sufferers' own doing. Many of these sufferers even deny to themselves that the illness does exists fearing that they may be viewed as insane, so much more those people who do not have first hand experience with the disease.

In many cases, OCD has destroyed the lives of its sufferers not necessarily because of it being an illness per se but because of how sufferers deal with it. While OCD is known to be highly treatable with a lot of treatment mechanisms available publicly even, sufferers do not see the need to go to these places and be treated. A quarter of them think they can overcome the disorder all by themselves. Another quarter thinks that that professional treatment is in fact effective; however, its cost is too much to handle. Another quarter denies to themselves that they do have the illness. The last quarter comprise those who do not even know that they have the illness.

This apathy towards OCD has become a key factor why the society is taking too long to understand and accept OCD completely. The rate of increase of society's interest is slow and while it is climbing inch by inch in histograms of societal trends specialists, more and more sufferers are already killing themselves out of depression caused by their isolation from peers and people. In the first place, they isolate themselves because they thought that no one will understand them and the illness that they have.

The lack of interaction with peers and family members has bee pointed out as one of the most pressing reasons why many of these sufferers immediately resort to suicide at the face of even the smallest of problems. The depression experienced by sufferers due to isolation is heightened by their obsessions and rituals, thus the ease to commit suicide without reservations.

What is most important then is for family members and for people around a person who exhibits signs and symptoms of OCD to be extra sensitive with the needs of the sufferer, most especially when it comes to encouragement to seek fro professional help. These actions compared to the degree of how much an OCD sufferer suffers from his or her condition definitely appears like a very small task, yet too few commit themselves into doing it. If you are amongst these kinds of people, just try to put yourself inside the shoe of an OCD sufferer and think for yourself of each situation wherein they felt like becoming a laughing stock or a submit of mockery.

OCD, although still incurable, can be easily managed through therapy or even prescription drugs. There is even a surgery already available in order to provide sufferers with all the variety of choices, depending on how they want to deal with their condition. All that sufferers need is full support from family members and surely treatment will be fast and easy.


About the Author:
Megan Baggel is a suicide survivor from Illinois. She attempted to kill herself after becoming spotlight in a college party and interrogated about her phobia to germs. After the incident, her family enrolled her to a CBT OCD treatment facility wherein she finally recovered from her OCD disease.



Article Originally Published On: http://www.articlesnatch.com


|

Loading...
Related....
Videos...

Recent Health Articles

Comments

Still can't find what you are looking for? Search for it!

Loading

Copyright 2005-2011 ArticleSnatch, LLC - All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy | Terms of Service.