28 December 2019

Hoarding, a type of obsessive-compulsive disorder?

Collyer’s syndrome aka hoarding was named in honour of Homer and Langley Collyer, brothers who buried themselves in their family mansion in Harlem, fill­ing it with rubbish between WW1 until they both died in 1947, buried under junk. By mid century, as the post-WW2 econ­om­ic boom enabled people of modest means to acquire heaps of objects, Collyer’s syndrome became more wide­spread.

If the compulsive hoarding of useless things seemed to be noticed only since WW1, and primarily the last few de­cades, something must have changed in history and cul­t­ure. For those who hoarded them, ob­jects took on individual person­alities with oversized emotional signif­ic­ance. The objects couldn’t be cas­ually discarded; if they were discarded by others, the hoarder suffered terrible distress.
 
The lounge room has disappeared under the rubbish
Vancouver

Preparing food, washing dishes and eating at the kitchen table
are impossible under the rubbish. 
Searcy, Arkansas

Acquisition was the first half of the disorder. People loved the rubbish they didn’t immediately need becausea.it was free,
b.it re­minded them of a particular experience,
c.they might need it some­day,
d.it might become valuable in the future or
e.the hoarder didn’t want to be cont­rolled by others.

Even if they would have liked to downsize, hoarders faced the over­whelming diff­iculty of sorting their mess. They tended to be easily distracted and couldn’t concentrate. And they put off making decisions, rather than risk making wrong decisions. Yet they had a deep aversion to others helping or sifting through the piles.

Was the hoarding disorder really increasing or was an inc­rease in media coverage simply boosting public awareness? The first task force that formed in 1989 estimated 19 mil­lion Americans hoarded. And now there are 100+ such organisations in the USA. 

The disorder occasionally showed up in adolescence, but it usually intensified in older age, made worse by divorce, bereavement, poor thinking or financial crisis. 65+ was the prime age for hoard­ing, the very point where people were losing their indep­endence, work, status, connect­ions, sensory acuity, physical strength and mental sharp­ness. Hoarding was one way an older person shored himself up. 

A hoarding industry has sprung up: psychologists, social workers, public health workers, professional org­anisers, fire marshals, bio-hazard cleaners and haulers. The workers found that the hoarders might have been intelligent, well-educated and creative, but they did NOT want to be sorted out. Even where city offic­ials had for­c­ed a cleanup, the house had filled up again soon after it had been emptied.

Clearly most hoarders didn’t see their own behaviour as disordered, and or­iginally psychology didn’t either. Only in 2013 was the key Diag­nostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders/DSM revised to list sev­ere hoarding as a disorder in its own right. According to this Manual, hoarding was diagnosed when the criteria below were met (American Psychiatric Association, 2013):

1.Hoarder had ongoing difficulty throwing out or giving away poss­essions, even if the objects were largely useless.

2.The sufferers had difficulty discarding possessions as they believed they needed to save them. They became very distressed when faced with the prospect of discarding them.

3.Hoarders ended up with too many possessions which caused con­gestion in the living areas of their home, office, car or garden. They built a wall of shame that blocked the entry of family, friends and trade­s­men.

4.The behaviour impaired hoarders’ ability to function at work, or to maintain a safe environment to live in. Crawling with rodents and cockroaches, covered in mould and bact­eria, these mounds were a health hazard and a fire hazard.

5.The hoarding was not attributable to another medical condition e.g. head injury, stroke.

6. The hoarding was not attributable to other psychiatric disorders.

Psych­ologists believed hoarding was a type of obsessive-compulsive disorder/OCD: repeated, ritualised action intended to ward off anxiety. That theory lasted for decades, even though clinical hoard­ing affected 6% of the world population, twice as many as OCD affected. Once the DSM listed severe hoarding as a disorder apart from obsessive-compulsive disorder, psychologists were asking what explained its prevalence.

Most people who engaged in extreme hoarding didn’t meet the crit­eria for OCD. They were more prone to depress­ion than those with OCD, and they had more difficulty making decis­ions. Worst of all they had little awareness of their own destructive behaviour. Genetic link­age studies showed a different pattern of inheritance from OCD, and brain scans showed a different pattern of activation. Drugs successful in treating OCD were ineffective for hoarding!

In 2013 hoarding disorder was freed from the OCD categ­ory, but could have been connected to an array of causes. In families with two or more members who hoarded, researchers identified an allele on chromosome 14. 80%+ of the subjects reported a first-degree rel­at­ive with similar prob­l­ems. See Randy Frost and Gail Stek­etee’s book Stuff: Compul­sive Hoarding and the Meaning of Things.

Sleeping by the hoarder and his family takes place wherever space is available
Singapore

In countries with large yards, the hoarding can spread out to the verandas and gardens
Bondi, Sydney

Other studies suggested non-genetic causes. Hoarding could acc­omp­any certain traumatic brain injuries, Tourette’s syndrome, ADHD, neuro-degenerative disorders, generalised anxiety disorder, clinic­al depression and dementia. Note that childhood poverty did not seem to be connected with hoarding. But resear­ch­ers found a possible link between hoarding and PTSD among Holocaust surviv­ors; late-onset hoarding was often linked to loss or trauma. The psych­ol­ogical thesis was that objects were gath­ered in a fut­ile attempt to fill emotional emptiness, piled up like a protective bar­r­icade.

Cognitive behavioural therapy was a commonly employed treatment for hoarding disorder. Anxiety Treatment Australia stated the aims of therapy thus: to
Decrease clutter
Improve the client’s decision-making re their belongings
Improve the hoarder’s organisational skills re their belongings
Increase the client’s resistance to the urge to save objects.

Suggested treatments that did not require professional intervention included:
Hoarders must cease subscribing to magazines and to put a “no junk mail”‘ notice on their letter box.
Hoarders must develop a schedule in activities previously avoided eg washing, emptying rubbish.
Sufferers will use relaxation skills, since discarding belongings can trigger anxiety.
Hoarders will keep a daily log of every time they acquire or purchase something so they can identify their triggers.

For properly assessed, professional treatment programmes, read the Treatments for Hoarding Behaviours in ResearchGate.

I encourage readers to see Hoarders, the successful American reality tv programme that debuted on A&E in Aug 2009.







18 comments:

Family First said...

Gag. imagine living with a family member who hoards. I would leave.

Anonymous said...

A rather surprising post. My partner has experience of dealing with hoarders and I have no doubt it is a mental illness. At an age of less than 65, I am decluttering. The electronic decluttering is the hardest, moving things from dvd and cd to cloud storage and USB storage.

I am not sure why, and I doubt you are a mental illness hoarder, but I think there is a lot of stuffs you could be rid of.

Hels said...

Family First

to keep families together, I have found only two urgent suggestions.
Firstly that the hoarder be utterly restricted to ONE room for his objects eg basement, attic or garage. While that dedicated room is the hoarder's to do with as he wants, his junk must NEVER escape to the rest of the house.
Secondly that the dangers faced by a hoarder within his space cannot be allowed to endanger the rest of the home - fire, rats, cockroaches etc.

I imagine most families would break up in the long run.

Hels said...

Andrew

I was a psychologist from 1970 to 1990, and although my responsibilities were all in the field of contraception, sterilisation, abortion and child maltreatment, I kept up to date reading up on many of the topics my colleagues worked on. Not hoarding, however.

Decluttering is a bugger for everyone, even those who are nowhere near the hoarding crisis. I still have my university books, albums and clothes, just in case 1968 becomes popular again.

Parnassus said...

Hello Hels, As you know I collect and value a lot of things, so although I am not like the hoarders you illustrate, some of the issues have parallels. Of course there is always the values-charged debate between minimalism and comfortably cluttered, but hoarders accumulate useless objects and often just plain trash until it interferes with their lives.

I am going through a decluttering myself right now--recycling extra jars, discarding old papers, etc. So far it has not made a huge difference, but it does keep the jungle at bay!
--Jim

Hels said...

Parnassus

I know exactly what you mean. Hoarding is a mental illness that damages families, but many ordinary people also have the tendency to hang on to stuff for years after it is useful.

Last Christmas (2018) I decided to take 1000 books out of my libraries upstairs, to sell or give away. They are still on the dining room table downstairs - not from laziness but because I never know if I will need these stunning books again. Good luck with your decluttering :)

Viola said...

Hello Hels, My husband and I both love books and we have them everywhere. My niece actually said to me that most people just have one shelf! The only solutions are to get rid of a lot of them and not to buy any more! It is easier said than done! I also have trouble with paper and he is even worse. Now I have to give up going to the book fetes - at least for a while.

It is probably a good idea to have a dedicated library if you have the room.

Hels said...

Oh Viola, I hear you.

The problem with we scholarly types is that we collect books, antiques, journal articles, paintings and prints etc etc. It is much easier to yell at people who collect sealed food packets, dog food, used baby nappies, ice cream buckets, old football boots and jumpers etc. But apart from the health risks, collecting is collecting.

I think my collection of journal articles is so huge, I have personally caused the deforestation of my state :(

Viola said...

I am not sure whether it is collecting, unless it is organized? I am pleased by the line: 'If it's books, it's not hoarding!' I would really like a proper library!

Hels said...

Viola

I had to marry off my two sons to take over their bedrooms for a] a study and b] a library. I have three giant filing cabinets for journal articles, all in subject order and then inside each hanging file by date order. So uber organised yes, but half of it not used since 1990.

You MUST have a proper library. Even if you have to add it to your tv room or bedroom.

♥ Łucja-Maria ♥ said...

Hello Hels!
May this year be the one in which all your wishes come true.
The one in which your dreams may turn into reality and all your fears may fade away.
Happy New Year!
Lucja

Hels said...

Lucja

many thanks for your blog. I know a lot about Russian and Austrian culture and architecture, but not about Poland. Have a safe and peaceful New Year.

Hilary Melton-Butcher said...

Hi Hels - I'm having another clear out - less for others to worry about; but thank goodness I'm not into hoarding - cheers and all the best for the coming year - Hilary

Hels said...

Hilary

Since only c5% of families are hoarders, most of us don't have to worry about the serious disorder in ourselves or in our families. But as you say, having a regular clear out is something that faces just about everyone. Prompted by this post, my husband went through his study cupboards last week and found documents, toys, medical records and handwritten speeches that he and his parents brought from Europe in 1951. It took him 6 hours to refile properly, give away or throw in the rubbish bin - and that was just one room!

Hope 2020 is a healthy, peaceful year.

mem said...

wow this is a bit out of left field fro you Hels but none the less interesting .
I recently had to go through my MILs things and dispose of things .I found it very painful t recognize things that she had loved and valued and that no one in the family wanted. It made me so aware of the incredible importance we place of n stuff no one else sees as valuable. It made me much more aware of buying or collecting things . I tend to have moved on to spending money and energy on experiences rather than stuff except in my garden where I am still collecting but at least the bees really appreciate it :)

Hels said...

mem

of course you should spend money and energy on your garden where you derive both pleasure and productive outcomes. Even if there are way too many vegetables and flowers, that is very far from hoarding.

But the objects that MIL loved are a very different problem. What do you do with clothes, shoes and hats from WW2? What will happen to 1950s metal-framed tables with formica tops and chairs? Apart from her treasured photo albums and jewellery, I can see why none of the family wanted to fill their own homes with her stuff.

grands ali said...

Community Support: Family and community involvement is essential, providing the patient with ongoing support outside therapy sessions. outpatient program mental health

Hels said...

grands ali
I totally agree. It is almost impossible for any person addicted to a crisis (drugs, alcohol, cigarettes, gambling, hoarding etc) to control their dangerous behaviours by themselves. Even if a hoard-reduction company comes in to return the house to safety and comfort, the house owner can return to hoarding chaos within 2 months. Ongoing therapeutic support is essential!