Examining Hoarding and Cluttering Behavior
Download
Report
Transcript Examining Hoarding and Cluttering Behavior
Examining Hoarding and
Cluttering Behavior
Matthew Soderquist, MSW
Adult Services Supervisor/CRC
Otsego/Crawford/Oscoda DHS
Overview
Diagnosing Hoarding Disorder
Underlying Beliefs and Impacts of Hoarding
Assessments
Interventions
Rules of Interventions
Goals of Interventions
Measuring Success
3 Case examples
Diagnosing Hoarding Disorder
Persistent difficulty discarding or parting with possessions,
regardless of their actual value.
This difficulty is due to a perceived need to save the items
and distress associated with discarding them.
The symptoms result in the accumulation of possessions that
congest and clutter active living areas and substantially
compromise their intended use.
The hoarding causes clinically significant distress or
impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas
of functioning.
Diagnosing Hoarding Disorder
In addition the DSM-5 lists two “specifiers”
(features that may or may not be present):
Excessive acquiring
Level of Awareness
Good or fair Insight
Poor insight
Absent insight
*Medical condition
*Another mental disorder
Underlying Beliefs
Overestimation of Catastrophe or Loss
Perfectionism
Responsibility
Need for control
Emotional Comfort
Sentimental
Security Based
Connections, Social Ties
Impacts of Individuals with
Hoarding and Cluttering Disorder
Isolation
Impedes development of relationships
Safety issues in their homes
Fear of eviction
Problems in their family relationships, loss of contact,
divorce, and custody.
“My wife left, My children don’t visit”
“I lost custody of my daughter because of hoarding”
“My family has completely abandoned me”
“My husband hurt himself while walking through the
house…he has no place to relax”
Impacts of Children of Hoarding
and Cluttering Behavior
Loss of space
Developmental delays
Hygiene problems (access to bathrooms, loss of
utilities)
“Doorbell Dread”
One child of a hoarder would strategically arrange for
her friends to visit while she was visiting her fathers
home
Financial strain
Poor eating habits
Physical and Mental Health Issues
Impact on social lives
CPS involvement, Divorce and Housing Instability
Impacts of Adult Children of
Hoarding and Cluttering Behavior
Strained familial relationships
Resistant to allowing grandchildren to visit
Grandparents become isolated from grandchildren
Adult children are ashamed to bring significant
others to visit parents.
Limited ability to determine the proper value in
objects
“Abandon all hope that the parent will reform
Assessments
Hoarding Assessment Tool
HOMES- Health, Obstacles, Mental health,
Endangerment, Structure and Safety.
Hoarding Rating Scale
Savings Inventory Revised
Savings Cognitions Inventory
Clutter Image Rating Scale
TACC- Tufts Animal Care and Condition
Interventions
What doesn’t work
Quick Cleanouts
Throwing things away in secret or lying
about what you will do with an object
Forced discarding often increases
distrust of others and increases
attachment of the object
May cause increase of collecting as fear
of losing is increased
Interventions
Professional Counseling or Therapy
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Exposure Therapy
Themes of CBT for Hoarding
Building a legacy of trash?
Everything goes to the dumpster eventually
Build relationships with people not things
Things are here to serve us not the other
way around
How does this item add to my life?
Interventions
Education
Buried in Treasures
BIT Workshop
Support Groups
Children of Hoarders
Adult Children of Hoarders
Interventions
Practical Methods
Cut of paper flow
Fowl the trash and avoid dumpsters
Involve family members
Non-shopping trips
Practice getting rid of objects
Develop guidelines for Keep vs. Toss
Safe vs. Unsafe
Rotten Wood
Pest infestation
Rules for Intervention
May not touch or throw anything out without
explicit permission
All decisions regarding saving, discarding
and organizing are made by client
O.H.I.O- Only Handle It Once
Focus on client goals and standards NOT
ours
Goals of Intervention
Client safety by uncluttering living space
Harm Reduction Model
Increase appropriate use of space
Improve decision making skills and
develop organizational plan
Reduce accumulations of new
possessions
Clean, Cull and Connect
Measuring Success
Small Steps
Safe, healthier environment for the client to
live in
Housing secured
Client’s motivation increases
Creation of a system for managing items
that client can manage on their own
Use of photos, CIR, HOMES
References
Bratiotis, C., & Schmalisch, C. S. (2011). The hoarding
handbook: a guide for human service professionals. Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders: DSM-5.
(5th ed.). (2013). Washington, D.C.: American Psychiatric
Association.
Frost, R. O., & Steketee, G. (2010). Stuff: compulsive hoarding
and the meaning of things. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
Lokers, L. M. (2013). Identifying and treating hoarding
behaviors. University of Michigan. Anxiety Disorders Program
Steketee, G., & Frost, R. O. (2013). Treatment for Hoarding
Disorder Workbook. (2nd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press,
USA.
Tolin. D.F. (2014). Buried in treasures help for compulsive
acquiring, saving, and hoarding (Second ed.). Oxford: Oxford
University Press.