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X-WR-CALNAME:International OCD Foundation
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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for International OCD Foundation
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UID:10002300-1770019200-1773680400@iocdf.org
SUMMARY:Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (MGH Online Course- Feb 2026))
DESCRIPTION:OCD is the fourth most common mental illness. Patients often report high functional impairment and poor quality of life. OCD can be a challenge to properly diagnose. Other conditions present in similar ways\, such as impulse control disorders. In order to help patients find wellness\, it is essential to accurately differentiate OCD.\nThis online course helps you understand and identify clinical features of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD). It is led by renowned OCD expert and Harvard Medical School Professor Sabine Wilhelm\, PhD. This course focuses on how to use effective assessment and treatment strategies for OCD in your practice.
URL:https://iocdf.org/event/cognitive-behavioral-therapy-for-obsessive-compulsive-disorder-mgh-online-course-feb-2026/
CATEGORIES:Professional Training
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DTSTAMP:20260617T203437
CREATED:20251215T183007Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251215T183007Z
UID:10002306-1770019200-1773680400@iocdf.org
SUMMARY:Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder: An Online Introduction (February 2026)
DESCRIPTION:Registration Deadline: February 16\, 2026 \nAvoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID) was recently added to the Feeding and Eating Disorders section of DSM-5 to describe children\, adolescents\, and adults who do not eat enough food (by variety or volume)\, typically because of sensory sensitivity\, fear of aversive consequences (e.g.\, choking\, vomiting)\, and/or apparent lack of interest in eating or food. Although there is a robust literature on pediatric feeding disorders in very young children\, ARFID itself is so new that there is currently no evidence-based treatment for older children\, adolescents\, or adults. Thus\, our online course will fill an important gap for our colleagues who are already seeing such patients in clinical practice by providing specialized training in a new form of cognitive-behavioral therapy for ARFID (CBT-AR) that we have developed and refined at Massachusetts General Hospital for patients ages 10 through older adults.
URL:https://iocdf.org/event/cognitive-behavioral-therapy-for-avoidant-restrictive-food-intake-disorder-an-online-introduction-february-2026/
CATEGORIES:Professional Training
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260314T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260314T130000
DTSTAMP:20260617T203437
CREATED:20260311T201622Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260311T201622Z
UID:10002339-1773486000-1773493200@iocdf.org
SUMMARY:Family and Loved One’s Online OCD Support Group!
DESCRIPTION:Chris Trondsen\, LMFT\, a clinician with OCD\, and his mom\, Liz\, are excited to remind you about our March\, virtual\, free Family and Loved Ones OCD Support Group. It will be held this Saturday\, March 14 for two hours\, from 11 AM – 1 PM PST. This support group is every second Saturday of the month\, from 11am to 1pm Pacific time. It is a free\, virtual support group available to anyone from anywhere! \nTo join the support group\, email info@ocdsocal.org and simply request the event’s Zoom link! Go to ocdsocal.org for more information. \nFor the March support group on the 14th\, Brooke Miller will be joining us to discuss her life experience as a person with OCD. \nShe has lived with OCD since childhood and has experienced multiple subtypes\, including contamination\, perfectionism\, moral scrupulosity\, and relationship OCD. Her journey has included ERP treatment\, eating disorder recovery\, and navigating additional diagnoses like panic disorder\, Bipolar II\, and PTSD. \nShe is a parent of two children with OCD\, her 13-year-old son (also diagnosed with PANDAS) and her 11-year-old daughter who was recently diagnosed. She speaks from both lived experience and the ongoing reality of parenting kids with OCD. \nShe is a registered nurse\, an IOCDF Advocate\, President of OCD Wisconsin\, and a presenter with NAMI’s Ending the Silence program. \nShe would like to discuss these topics:\n– What OCD can actually look like in kids (beyond stereotypes)\n– Parenting a child with OCD while also managing your own OCD\n– How to support kids through ERP (and manage accommodations vs. support)\n– Navigating school\, family dynamics\, and daily life with OCD\n– The emotional impact on parents/caregivers (guilt\, fear\, burnout)\n– Hope and recovery and what progress really looks like \nPlease join us this Saturday for a wealth of information on both living with OCD and parenting children with OCD! \nWe will see you this Saturday\, March14th\, from 11 AM -1 PM PST \nThe event is open to loved ones\, family members and spouses of someone with OCD\, as well as people with OCD—or anyone else interested. \nTo join the support group\, email info@ocdsocal.org and simply request the event’s Zoom link! Go to ocdsocal.org for more information!
URL:https://iocdf.org/event/family-and-loved-ones-online-ocd-support-group-4/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Affiliate-hosted,Virtual Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://iocdf.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/March-Family-Loved-Ones-OCD-Support-Group.png
ORGANIZER;CN="OCD Southern California":MAILTO:info@ocdsocal.org
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