Whilst there is no definition of compulsive hoarding in accepted diagnostic criteria (such the current DSM), Frost and Hartl1 provide the following defining features:
- the acquisition of, and failure to discard a large number of possessions that appear to be useless or of limited value
- living spaces sufficiently cluttered so as to preclude activities for which those spaces were designed
- significant distress of impairment in functioning caused by the hoarding
- The client, D, lived with her two children, aged 11 and 14, and described her current hoarding behaviour as a 'small problem that mushroomed' many years ago, along with corresponding marital difficulties. D reported that her father was a hoarder and that she started saving when she was a child. In addition to hoarding, she reported several other obsessive-compulsive symptoms, such as fear of hurting others due to carelessness, an over-concern with dirt and germs, a need for symmetry and a need to know or remember things. D also suffered from a handwashing compulsion and engaged in lengthy cleaning rituals of household items. The volume of cluttered possessions took up approximately 70 per cent of the living space in her house. With the exception of the bathroom, none of the rooms in the house could easily be used for their intended purpose. Both of the doors to the outside were blocked, so entry to the house was through the garage and the kitchen, where the table and chairs were covered with papers, newspapers, bills, books, half-consumed bags of chips and her children's school papers dating back ten years.
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See also
External Links
References
1Frost RO, Hartl TL. (1996) A cognitive-behavioral model of compulsive hoarding.
Behavior Research and Therapy, 34 (4), 341-50.
2Hartl TL, Frost RO. (1999) Cognitive-behavioral treatment of compulsive hoarding: a multiple baseline experimental case study. Behavior Research and Therapy, 37 (5), 451-61.
3Steketee G, Frost R. (2003 Compulsive hoarding: Current status of the research.
Clinical Psychology Review, 23 (7), 905-27.