Young and Obsessed
Children with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
In the UK it is estimated that 1 in 100 children have
OCD. It is estimated by The
National Mental Health Association, (NMHA) in America, that one million
children and teenagers in that country have OCD.
There is little doubt that OCD often runs in families, although it appears
genes are only partly the cause.
OCD can make a child's day-to-day life very difficult and stressful. The
OCD symptoms often take up a
great deal of the child's time and energy, making it difficult to complete
tasks such as homework or household chores. In the morning, they often feel
they must do their rituals exactly right, or the rest of the day will not go
well. Meanwhile, they are probably feeling rushed to be on time for school. In
the evenings, they may feel they have compulsive rituals to do before they can go to bed and at
the same time they have to get their homework finished, as well as tidy their
rooms!
All this stress and pressure means that children with OCD frequently don't
feel well physically and are prone to stress-related ailments such as headaches
or upset stomaches. Very often, they stay up into the night because of their
OCD, and are then exhausted the next day.
Children will often say their obsessions feel like a lot of worries. They
may worry about having a serious illness or worry that intruders might enter
the house. They may worry about germs and toxic substances. Whatever fear it
is, no matter how busy the child is or how much they try to think about other
things, the worries just wont go away. Children may worry that they're
"crazy" because they are aware that their thinking is different than
that of their friends and family.
When the Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder is severe, the child may get teased
or ridiculed and a child's self-esteem can be negatively affected because the
OCD has led to embarrasment time-after-time. It can affect friendships because
of the amount of time spent preoccupied with
obsessions
and compulsions, or because friends react negatively to unusual
OCD-related
behaviors.
Although we're not sure why, the obsessions will often change as the child
gets older. For example, a child of six or seven may worry about germs but then
at seventeen this might change to a fear of fires.
At around the age of eight, children will begin to notice that their
behaviours are abnormal and will try to hide them. They become embarrassed
talking about their rituals and may deny that they have OCD. Younger children
are not as aware and make no attempt to hide their behaviour.
Casual observers of parents of OCD children will often say they are too lax
with them and shouldn't give in to their behaviours. But whilst to these
observers the children may just appear to be naughty, to the children
themselves, and their parents, their behaviour is the only way they can express
their obsessions.
Diagnosis of OCD in children can often be very difficult. The children have
a harder time articulating their OCD symptoms and this makes both diagnosis and
treatment much harder.
OCD children
very often do not get the emotional support that they need, not because their
parents are uncaring, but because their parents are as confused and bewildered
as they are. This confusion sometimes comes across as frustration and anger.
Children with OCD sometimes have episodes in which they are extremely angry
with their parents. This is usually because they have been unwilling (or
unable!) to comply with the child's OCD demands. It can be very difficult when
a child obsessed with germs demands that they be allowed to shower for hours,
or that their clothes be washed numerous times or in a certain way.
Medication doses are more difficult to initially regulate
for children than for adults. Most children metabolize medications quite
rapidly. So although they will probably be started on a very low dose, later it
can be necessary to use higher, adult-sized doses.
There are several disorders that are thought to contribute to OCD. These are
eating disorders, problems at birth that subtly change the brain's development,
and Tourette's syndrome. Teenagers who show symptoms of other mental disorders,
most often Depression and Substance Abuse, are at a higher risk of developing OCD by
the age of eighteen than teenagers who don't.
Top / Page 2
home
/ about me
/ inside my ocd mind
/ ocd diary
/ poetry
signs-symptoms /
ocd children /
ocd treatment /
family & friends
bulletin board /
email me
|