Evidence-based mental health library

OCD and Personality Disorder Guides

Citation-rich guides to obsessive-compulsive disorder, borderline personality disorder, and every named DSM-5-TR personality disorder. Each page separates established evidence from clinical uncertainty and avoids reducing people to stereotypes.

How these pages were verified

Claims are cited inline and linked to full references. Sources prioritize official clinical guidance, government health agencies, DSM-5-TR and ICD-11 materials, systematic reviews, meta-analyses, randomized trials, and peer-reviewed clinical reviews. All evidence was reviewed July 13, 2026.

These pages are educational and cannot diagnose the reader or an absent third party. They also do not present herbs or supplements as replacements for psychotherapy, psychiatric care, or crisis treatment.

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Why OCD appears in this library

OCD is not a personality disorder. It is included because it was part of this project and because obsessive-compulsive personality disorder is frequently confused with OCD. The dedicated OCPD guide compares them directly.

Cluster A

Paranoid, schizoid, and schizotypal personality disorders. Research is comparatively sparse, so these pages make uncertainty and classification differences explicit.

Cluster B

Antisocial, borderline, histrionic, and narcissistic personality disorders. The guides separate diagnosis from internet labels, stigma, and assumptions about abuse or dangerousness.

Cluster C

Avoidant, dependent, and obsessive-compulsive personality disorders, with detailed comparisons to social anxiety, realistic dependence, OCD, autism, and other overlapping presentations.

Use the guides as a map, not a verdict

Similar symptoms can arise from trauma, mood disorders, neurodevelopmental conditions, substance effects, medical illness, unsafe environments, or ordinary personality traits. A responsible assessment looks at the pattern over time, across settings, and in the person’s cultural and developmental context.

Editorial reading context

How to read OCD and Personality Disorder Guides

Citation-rich, evidence-based guides to OCD, BPD, and all ten DSM-5-TR personality disorders, with diagnosis, differential diagnosis, treatment, safety, and stigma context. This guide is intended to help readers make sense of evidence, safety, and practical fit without turning supplement research into a one-size-fits-all checklist. Use it alongside the linked herb and compound profiles for deeper mechanism and safety details.

For OCD and Personality Disorder Guides, focus on whether the evidence matches the exact outcome you care about, whether the dose discussed is realistic, and whether the safety profile fits your medical context. Strong marketing language should carry less weight than human evidence and transparent product quality.

When a page discusses dependence-forming substances, restricted compounds, or high-risk contexts, treat it as harm-reduction education only. It is not a buying guide, dosing instruction, or substitute for professional care.