IMPACT-OCD Training Modules

If you have a login for CPI's LMS, you can also access the following IMPACT-OCD modules, click here to login.

The Improving Providers’ Assessment, Care Delivery and Treatment of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) curriculum includes the following modules and provides 1.5 self-study contact hours of Social Work, Licensed Mental Health Counselor, Psychologist and CASAC Continuing Education as well as 1.5 self-study contact hours of Continuing Medical Education:

How to Detect and Diagnose Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder: Tips and Tools

Exposure and Response Prevention: A Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for OCD

Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder and Schizophrenia-Spectrum Disorders: How to Differentiate and Treat

These courses are also available as standalone courses but are not individually approved for CEUs. If you would like ot receive CEUs, please register and complete the curriculum mentioned above.

You can also access the IMPACT-OCD module (below) and earn .5 self-study contact hours of Continuing Medical Education.

Pharmacological Treatment of OCD: Nuts and Bolts

 

To complete this training in the CPI LMS, click here to login.

OCD: Nuts and Bolts Summary sheet

 

Detection, Assessment, and Treatment of OCD in Children and Adolescents

This course provides 1.5 self-study contact hours of Social Work, Licensed Psychologist, Licensed Mental Health Counselor, and CASAC/CPP/CPS Continuing Education and is an enduring material available for a maximum of 1.5 hours of Continuing Medical Education (CME).

IMPACT-OCD Webinars

 

Seven Common Misconceptions of OCD

OCD Seven Common Misconceptions Webinar Resources

If taken in the CPI LMS, this webbinar provides 1.25 self-study contact hours of Social Work, Licensed Mental Health Counselor, and CASAC Continuing Education. 

To complete this training in the CPI LMS, click here to login.

Seven Things to Know about Child and Adolescent OCD

Although also available in the CPI LMS, please note that this webinar is not approved for continuing education credits. 

Improving Treatment for Obsessive Compulsive Disorders

More than 2 in 100 (2%) of Americans will experience OCD during their lifetime. Nonetheless, the disorder remains misunderstood, misdiagnosed, and stigmatized.

Hear from researchers and advocates dedicated to improving care for OCD. Whether or not you or a loved one is diagnosed with OCD, join us during OCD Awareness Week for clinical and personal perspectives on how we can all help close a gap in the mental health system.

Hear My Story: Personal Experiences with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder

 

Max and His Mother Meet with a Therapist to Discuss His OCD

In this video you will meet Max, an adolescent struggling with OCD. Watch as Max and his mother meet with a therapist for the first time to discuss Max’s OCD. The video demonstrates what types of questions a therapist would ask to understand how OCD impacts the individual and their family. The therapist in the video also explains a treatment option called Exposure and Response Prevention (EX/RP) to Max and his mother.

Max’s Experience with Exposure and Response Prevention Treatment for His OCD

In this video you will hear from Max about his experience with receiving treatment for his OCD. Max shares what his life was like prior to treatment and how OCD got in the way of the life he wanted to live. Max explains what Exposure and Response Prevention (EX/RP) treatment was like for him and the changes he saw in his life after working with an EX/RP therapist.

Ally Meets with a Therapist to Discuss her OCD Symptoms – Part 1

Ally Meets with a Therapist to Discuss her OCD Symptoms – Part 2

Meet Ally, a young adult struggling with OCD. In Part 1 you will hear how Ally’s OCD symptoms have been affecting her and her family's lives. In Part 2, Ally’s therapist provides psychoeducation on what obsessions and compulsions are and asks questions to understand the types of obsessions and compulsions Ally experiences. The therapist in the video explains that Ally’s symptoms are consistent with OCD and that there are treatment options.

Ally’s Experience with Treatment for her OCD- Part 1

Ally’s Experience with Treatment for her OCD- Part 2

 

In these two videos you will hear from Ally about her reaction to learning that her symptoms are OCD as well as what life is like after receiving treatment. In Part 1 you will hear Ally speak about how her OCD went undetected throughout her life. In Part 2, Ally describes getting treatment for her OCD. Ally explains that she now understands what OCD is and can monitor her progress. She is also able to communicate with her loved ones when she needs help.