OCD Action

OCD Action is a UK registered charity no. 1154202 regulated by the Charity Commission.

Foundation

OCD Action is a national UK charity that provides support and information to anybody affected by obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD). The charity works to raise awareness of the disorder amongst the public and frontline healthcare workers. Formed by a group of volunteers and leading professionals in 1994, originally as "obsessive action" the charity later changed its name in 2002 to "OCD Action".[1]

Activities

The charity provides a national telephone support and information helpline, e-mail service, website, printed materials and advocacy service.

The charity also plays a key role in ensuring media coverage of OCD through providing "case studies" to relevant media organisations as well as utilising its trustees to provide professional comment and analysis. A recent example was a feature in The Financial Times.[2]

Three members of OCD Action's board of trustees supported the UK's National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence production of guidelines for the treatment of OCD.[3]

Management

OCD Action is a membership organisation with members electing a management body, the board of trustees, every year at the charity's Annual General Meeting. The trustee group is currently made up of three medical experts, two carers, four people with OCD and one charity management and fundraising professional.[4]

Funding

OCD Action receives no government funding and as such raises income from membership fees and donations. The charity enjoys strong support from large UK national charitable trust including Comic Relief,[5] The Lloyds TSB Foundation for England and Wales,[6] The Garfield Weston Foundation[7] and The Tudor Trust.

gollark: Stock market™ investing produces 7%ish returns a year, 4% or so factoring in inflation, so if you have, er, 25x the money you need per year as initial cashmoney, you can just run it off interest.
gollark: that would be manual.
gollark: Not what I was thinking!
gollark: I suppose it *may* be possible to autogenerate money?
gollark: Yes, but that would cost !!MONEY!!.

References

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