Document Type

Article

Publication Date

7-1-2000

Publication Title

Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy

Abstract

Treatment of compulsive hoarding has rarely been described in the literature, apart from standard treatments for obsessive compulsive disorder of which hoarding is thought to be a subset. This paper presents preliminary findings from seven patients treated with cognitive and behavioral interventions derived from Frost and Hartl's (1996) theoretical model of hoarding. Six clients attended 15 group treatment sessions over 20 weeks plus individual home treatment sessions and one client received 20 weekly-sessions of individual treatment only. After 20 weeks, treatment resulted in noticeable improvement in several hoarding symptoms for five of the seven patients, especially reduction in excessive acquisition of possessions, although problems with clutter persisted. Three of four clients who continued in treatment for approximately 1 year showed substantial further improvement, although none felt entirely recovered. Findings are discussed in light of the model of hoarding and possible modifications to treatment to enhance motivation and benefits.

Keywords

Clutter, Cognitive behavior therapy, Obsessive compulsive disorder, OCD

Volume

28

Issue

3

First Page

259

Last Page

268

DOI

10.1017/S1352465800003064

ISSN

13524658

Comments

Archived as published. Open access paper.

Included in

Psychology Commons

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