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Anxiety Disorders Center:  Compulsive Hoarding

Click here if you would like information about a current study of compulsive hoarding being conducted by the Anxiety Disorders Center.  Note: This study is only available to people who live within a 40-minute drive from Hartford.

Click here for information about our intensive outpatient therapy program for compulsive hoarding (part of our obsessive-compulsive disorder program).  Note: This program is only available to people who live within a 30-minute drive from Hartford. 

Click here if you would like to receive information by mail or e-mail about compulsive hoarding, a list of hoarding treatment providers nationwide, information about upcoming research studies, and announcements for new self-help references for compulsive hoarding.  Note: this option is available to all, regardless of where you live.

Click here to view the first installment of Dr. Tolin's discussions about compulsive hoarding on The Oprah Winfrey Show and click here to view the second installment.
Click here to view Dr. Tolin's third and fourth appearances discussing compulsive hoarding on The Oprah Winfrey Show and click here to take the hoarding self-assessment quiz mentioned on the show.

Click here to view Dr. Tolin's first discussion about compulsive hoarding on Good Morning America and click here to view his second segment on GMA.

Click here to view  Dr. Tolin's discussion about compulsive hoarding on ABC News Medical Mysteries.
(Note: Once you follow the link above to the article, click on Health Video towards the bottom of the left border and search for hoarding to access the video.)

Click here to listen to Dr. Tolin's interview about compulsive hoarding with Psychjourney Podcasts.

Click here to learn more about Dr. Tolin's book Buried in Treasures: Help for Compulsive Acquiring, Saving, and Hoarding
  Click here to see larger image.

Compulsive hoarding is thought by many to be a subtype of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD).  People are thought to have a compulsive hoarding problem when they meet all three of these criteria:

  • They regularly keep a large number of possessions that most people would not consider to be very useful or valuable.
  • Their home, or parts of their home, are so cluttered that they can no longer use those parts of their home for their intended purpose.
  • The clutter is so bad that it causes significant distress or impairment.

The causes of compulsive hoarding are not known, but researchers think that it results from problems in one or more of these areas:

  • Information processing (e.g., problems categorizing or making decisions)
  • Beliefs about possessions (e.g., a sense of attachment to possessions, or fears of forgetting things)
  • Emotional distress about discarding, which leads to avoidance of discarding

Treatment for compulsive hoarding is still in the experimental stage.  Most medications that are useful for OCD do not appear to be as useful for compulsive hoarding.  Cognitive-behavioral therapy, in which the therapist visits the person’s home and helps them learn how to manage the clutter and make appropriate decisions about discarding, may be helpful.

 


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