Everyone has their own behavioral habits, for example, some people have unique hobbies, and voyeurism is a situation where individuals exist. This is an abnormal psychological condition that involves peeking at other people's body parts or engaging in sexual activity, and requires early treatment.
For people with voyeuristic tendencies, cognitive treatment is necessary first. Firstly, patients should establish a correct outlook on life and cultivate their correct sexual morality and concepts. Encourage patients to face reality, eliminate deep and persistent abnormal psychology, strengthen their determination and will to treat sexual abnormalities, and establish confidence in overcoming diseases.
Secondly, relevant treatment should also be given in terms of behavior. For example, using aversive conditioning therapy, patients are asked to hold a photo of a beautiful woman or a female genital organ diagram, and when they cause sexual arousal or penile erection, they are given aversive conditioning stimuli, such as electric shocks, elastic bands hitting the wrist, injection of emetic, and other methods. Or it can be effective to treat voyeurism by opposing thoughts and other methods.
Then there is the medication for the treatment of voyeurism. Due to sexual patients often having compulsive impulses, the ideal drug currently is chlorpromazine, which should be used under the guidance of a doctor. This drug not only can combat depression and anxiety, but also has a significant effect on compulsive impulses. During seizures, sedatives and other medications can also be taken to alleviate their strong thoughts.
In addition, there is a way to divert attention, which can also treat voyeurism. It is necessary to comprehensively treat this abnormal condition from multiple aspects, and family members also need to actively encourage the patient, not ridicule and stay away from him, and help him get rid of this pain early, rather than letting it develop and cause greater harm.