OCD Psychiatry Care

Transform Your OCD Journey with Compassionate Care

Evidence-Based Psychiatric Support for Intrusive Thoughts and Compulsions

Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) is not about being tidy or particular — it is a neurobiological condition involving intrusive thoughts and repetitive behaviors or mental rituals that attempt to relieve distress.

Receive thorough assessments that accurately identify OCD symptoms and guide tailored treatment plans to meet your individual needs.

At Arizona Mental Wellness, our psychiatric team provides compassionate, evidence-based evaluation and medication support for individuals experiencing OCD symptoms of any type — contamination fears, checking, perfectionism, taboo thoughts, relationship OCD, or Pure O (internal compulsions).

Benefit from expert medication oversight designed to reduce intrusive thoughts and compulsive behaviors effectively and safely.

Neurodiversity-Affirming Support

OCD is highly treatable, and you don’t have to face it alone.

Compassionate Care for Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder

Understanding OCD From a Psychiatric Perspective

OCD follows a predictable pattern:

Obsession

Intrusive, unwanted thoughts, images, or impulses (e.g., fear of harm, contamination, mistakes, morality, identity doubts).

Anxiety Response

The mind and body react with discomfort, fear, or urgency.

Compulsion

Behaviors or mental rituals aimed at reducing anxiety (checking, cleaning, counting, self-reassurance, avoidance).

Temporary Relief – The relief reinforces the cycle — strengthening OCD over time. OCD is rooted in serotonin dysregulation and rigid neural pathways, not personality flaws or lack of willpower.

Our Approach

Discover how our personalized OCD care guides you through evaluation, treatment, and ongoing support for lasting wellness.

Obsessions (intrusive thoughts)

  • Contamination or illness fears
  • Fear of harming self or others
  • Perfectionism, doubt, “not just right” feelings
  • Sexual or taboo intrusive thoughts
  • Scrupulosity (moral/religious anxiety)
  • Relationship OCD
  • “What if?” spirals
  • Fear of losing control
  • Identity or orientation-based doubt

Compulsions (behaviors or mental rituals)

  • Repeated checking
  • Cleaning or washing
  • Repeating or redoing tasks
  • Reassurance seeking (external or internal)
  • Counting, neutralizing thoughts, mental reviewing
  • Avoidance of triggers or uncertainty

OCD symptoms can significantly disrupt daily life — but with treatment, relief is possible.

Psychiatric Evaluation for OCD

Your psychiatrist will explore:

Medication Management for OCD

Medication can significantly reduce the intensity and frequency of intrusive thoughts and compulsions, enabling more effective behavioral change.

First-Line Treatment: SSRIs at OCD Dosages

OCD typically responds best to higher SSRI doses than those used for anxiety or depression.

Common options include:

  • Fluvoxamine (OCD-specific)
  • Fluoxetine
  • Sertraline
  • Escitalopram
  • Paroxetine
Second-Line: Clomipramine

A powerful TCA used when SSRIs are partially effective.

Adjunctive Options

For severe or resistant OCD:

  • Atypical antipsychotics (low dose)
  • Glutamate-modulating medications
  • Beta-blockers for physical anxiety

Medication decisions are collaborative — you remain in control of your treatment.

How Psychiatry Helps Beyond Medication

Psychiatric support includes:

  • Education about the OCD cycle
  • Understanding intrusive thoughts (why they happen & why they’re not dangerous)
  • Breaking reassurance and avoidance loops
  • Managing anxiety spikes
  • Improving sleep and nervous system regulation
  • Treating comorbid conditions that worsen OCD (e.g., depression, ADHD, general anxiety)

Many clients experience meaningful relief even before beginning therapy.

Combined Care Leads to Best Outcomes

While psychiatric medication reduces distress and intrusive thought intensity, behavioral therapy is essential for long-term progress.

If therapy becomes part of your care, we coordinate with ERP-trained providers to ensure consistency and shared goals.

  • Evidence-Based OCD Evaluations
  • Collaborative Medication Management
  • Neurodiversity-Affirming Approach
  • Integrated Therapy Partnerships
  • Long-Term Recovery Support

Solving the Real Problems That You Face


OCD in Neurodivergent Clients

OCD commonly overlaps with:

  • ADHD
  • Autism or sensory sensitivities
  • Perfectionism and high anxiety sensitivity
  • Executive functioning challenges

Our neurodiversity-affirming approach considers:

  • Sensory overload
  • Intrusive “sticky thoughts”
  • Hyperfocus and looping thinking
  • Masking and internal rituals
  • Need for predictable structure

You will be understood and supported here.

When to Seek Psychiatric Support for OCD

You may benefit from psychiatric care if you experience:

  • Intrusive thoughts that are hard to dismiss
  • Repetitive rituals or avoidance behaviors
  • Fear of harming others despite no intent
  • Guilt, shame, or obsessive doubt
  • Difficulty focusing due to mental loops
  • Anxiety or panic triggered by uncertainty
  • Depression or exhaustion from OCD

If OCD is affecting your relationships, work, or daily functioning, we are here to help.

Q: How can a psychiatric provider help with OCD?

A: A psychiatric provider evaluates intrusive thoughts, compulsive behaviors, and anxiety patterns to provide an accurate diagnosis. Treatment may include medication, symptom education, and coordination with ERP therapists. Medication can reduce obsessive intensity and support recovery.

Q: What medications are commonly used to treat OCD?

A: SSRIs at higher therapeutic doses are the first-line treatment for OCD. Clomipramine and augmentation medications may be used if symptoms remain severe. Your provider will tailor treatment based on your medical history and symptom pattern.

Q: Does medication cure OCD?

A: Medication does not cure OCD but can significantly reduce the frequency and intensity of obsessions and compulsions. The best long-term outcomes typically occur when medication is paired with ERP-based therapy.

Q: How is OCD diagnosed?

A: OCD is diagnosed through a detailed assessment that explores intrusive thoughts, compulsions, mental rituals, avoidance behaviors, triggers, and functional impact. Your psychiatrist helps distinguish OCD from anxiety, trauma responses, or other conditions.

Q: Do I need therapy if I start medication for OCD?

A: Yes. Medication helps reduce symptoms, but ERP therapy is the gold standard for long-term improvement. Many clients use medication to make ERP more manageable and effective.