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Treatment for Hoarding Disorder: Therapist Guide

✍ Scribed by Gail Steketee, Randy O. Frost


Publisher
Oxford University Press
Year
2013
Tongue
English
Leaves
277
Series
Treatments That Work
Edition
2
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


The relationship people have with their possessions ranges from purely utilitarian to intensely emotional. For most people, their personal possessions provide them with a sense of security, comfort, and pleasure. However, if someone loses the ability to distinguish useful or important possessions from those that make life overly complicated, the objects can become a prison. For people who suffer from Hoarding Disorder (HD), the process of getting rid of unneeded objects is not easy. For them, possessions never "feel" unneeded and trying to get rid of them is an excruciating emotional ordeal.

This Second Edition of
Treatment for Hoarding Disorder is the culmination of more than 20 years of research on understanding hoarding and building an effective intervention to address its myriad components. Thoroughly updated and reflective of changes made to the Fifth Edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual for Mental Disorders (DSM-5), this second edition of the Therapist Guide and accompanying client Workbook outlines an empirically supported and effective CBT program for treating hoarding disorder. This Therapist Guide is written for mental health clinicians-psychologists, social workers, psychiatrists, counselors, and psychiatric nurses-to guide effective treatment of people with hoarding disorder. It provides numerous assessment and intervention forms to help clients use the methods described in the intervention. A major goal of the treatment is to recapture the positive role of possessions in the lives of people with hoarding problems, and strategies are outlined for
sustaining gains and making further progress, as well as for managing stressful life events that can provoke problematic acquiring and difficulty discarding.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Contents
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1 Introduction to Hoarding Disorder
Chapter 2 Evidence-Based Treatment for Hoarding Disorder
Chapter 3 Assessing Hoarding
Chapter 4 Case Formulation
Chapter 5 Enhancing Motivation
Chapter 6 Planning Treatment
Chapter 7 Reducing Acquiring
Chapter 8 Training Skills
Chapter 9 Making Decisions About Saving and Discarding
Chapter 10 Cognitive Strategies
Chapter 11 Complications in the Treatment of Hoarding Disorder
Chapter 12 Maintaining Gains
Appendices
1. Clinician Session Form
2. Hoarding Interview
3. Hoarding Rating Scale (HRS)
4. Saving Inventoryβ€”Revised (SI-R)
5. Clutter Image Rating (CIR)
6. Saving Cognitions Inventory (SCI)
7. Activities of Daily Living in Hoarding (ADL-H)
8. Safety Questions
9. Home Environment Index (HEI)
10. Scoring Keys
11. General Conceptual Model of Hoarding
12. Brief Th ought Record
13. Acquiring Form
14. Clutter Visualization Form
15. Unclutter Visualization Form
16. Acquiring Visualization Form
17. Practice Form
18. Thought Record
19. Instructions for Coaches
20. Family Response to Hoarding Scale (FRHS)
References
Readings and Resources
About the Authors
Index
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
R
S
T
U
V
W


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