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Compulsive Hoarding Is A Disorder That Is Essay

Compulsive hoarding is a disorder that is characterized by an inability discarding items that to most people appear to have little or no value. This inability to throw things away results in an accumulation of clutter that often leads to an inability to use living areas and workspaces for their intended functions. Moreover, the clutter can lead to potential serious health conditions and to safety risks of the hoarder or others. In order for a person to meet criteria to qualify for a diagnosis of compulsive hoarding the person must experience significant personal distress and/or impairment in their functioning due to their hoarding behaviors. More often it is the impairment in functioning that qualifies someone for a diagnosis as the hoarding behavior serves to reduce anxiety in the person associated with discarding items. Several types of functional impairment seen in hoarders include: health or fire hazards due to clutter or waste in the case of pet hoarders; inability to have guests due to clutter; infestations of insects, rodents, etc.; inability to eat or make food; inability to find important possessions; and interpersonal conflicts caused by the clutter. Not all hoarding behaviors qualify as compulsive hoarding and hoarding may be a symptom of another psychiatric diagnosis (American Psychiatric Association [APA], 2000).

Compulsive hoarding behaviors often have a dramatic impact on the lives of the hoarders as well as family members and friends. Ambivalence by the hoarder is common and family members are often dismayed at the seemingly...

This often leads to alienation from friends and family and other hard feelings. It is often a family member or friend that initiates some form of treatment and not the hoarder. Families, children, and friends can be destroyed by the complications associated with the hoarder not to mention the potential health hazards that may occur. On other hand this ambivalence can also result in family members colluding with the hoarder's illness which makes treatment even more difficult to initiate (Tolin, Fitch, Frost, & Steketee, 2001).
Compulsive hoarding is not currently considered to be a distinct form of mental illness. Traditionally a diagnosis of compulsive hoarding has been viewed as a subtype of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD). The DSM-IV-TR (The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) diagnostic criteria were was published in 1994 with the text amendments updated in 2000. The current criteria list compulsive hoarding as a subtype of OCD and does not list hoarding behaviors in the diagnostic criterion of OCD (APA, 2000). Nonetheless, this may change when the DSM-V is released as Hoarding Disorder (compulsive hoarding) is expected to be defined as a discrete disorder. The reason for the change is that a good deal of the research on compulsive hoarding has investigated the relationship between OCD and hoarding. This research has raised some doubts about the OCD connection to hoarding because while some hoarding behaviors respond to treatments…

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References

American Psychiatric Association (2000). Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental

Disorders, IV- Text Revision. Washington, DC: Author.

Sadock, B.J., and Sadock, V.A., (2007). Kaplan and Sadock's Synopsis of Psychiatry:

Behavioral Sciences/Clinical Psychiatry (10th edition). Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
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