Obsessive Compulsive Inventory – Revised (OCI-R)

Assessment Overview
Obsessive‑Compulsive Inventory – Revised (OCI‑R)
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A brief 18‑item self-report questionnaire measuring OCD symptom severity across six subscales: washing, checking, ordering, obsessing, hoarding, neutralizing.
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Takes ~3 minutes to complete, suitable for ages 16+.
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Designed for self-screening, tracking therapy progress, and identifying which OCD symptoms are most prominent .
Eating Attitudes Test – 26 items (EAT‑26)
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The most widely used standardized self-report screening tool for eating‑disorder risk. It detects disordered attitudes and behaviors around dieting, bulimia, food preoccupation, and oral control.
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Contains 26 items rated on a six‑point scale (“Always” to “Never”). Takes about 2–5 minutes to complete.
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Has three subscales: Dieting, Bulimia/Food Preoccupation, and Oral Control. A total score ≥ 20 suggests eating disorder risk (referral recommended).
🔧 How to Take This Combined Assessment
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Be Honest & Open-minded
There are no right or wrong answers. Your responses are confidential and based on your recent feelings and behaviors. -
Take It in a Calm Setting
Choose a quiet environment without distractions. Allow about 10 minutes to complete both questionnaires thoroughly. -
Scoring & Interpretation
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OCI‑R: Total score suggests severity; subscale scores highlight specific OCD themes. A score ≥ 21 is often considered clinically significant.
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EAT‑26: Total ≥ 20, or noted concerning behaviors, indicate a need for follow-up. But note—it’s a screening tool, not a formal diagnosis (especially for binge‑eating).
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Next Steps
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Review your scores and subscale patterns.
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If you hit clinical thresholds or feel the test doesn’t capture your concerns, consult a qualified mental health professional for evaluation.
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📋 Ready? Take the Test Here:
👉 Click this link to take the OCI‑R + EAT‑26 assessment
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This combined test includes the full OCI‑R (18 items) and the EAT‑26 (26 items) in one go.
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It’s free, anonymous, and self‑scored—ideal for personal insight or to share with a therapist.
Responses