2007
DOI: 10.1016/j.brat.2007.01.001
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An open trial of cognitive-behavioral therapy for compulsive hoarding

Abstract: The aim of the present study was to provide preliminary data on the efficacy of a new cognitivebehavioral treatment (CBT) for compulsive hoarding. Fourteen adults with compulsive hoarding (10 treatment completers) were seen in two specialty CBT clinics. Participants were included if they met research criteria for compulsive hoarding according to a semistructured interview, were age 18 or above, considered hoarding their main psychiatric problem, and were not receiving mental health treatment. Patients received… Show more

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Cited by 206 publications
(172 citation statements)
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References 46 publications
(47 reference statements)
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“…In a group treatment for compulsive hoarding, Steketee and colleagues (2000) reported an attrition rate of 14.3% after 15 sessions (N = 7); 50% of the participants who completed the group treatment also completed 14 sessions of individual treatment. Tolin and colleagues (2007) (Steketee, Frost, Tolin, Rasmussen, & Brown, 2010;Tolin, Steketee, & Frost, 2007). Although the attrition rates reported above are not higher than those seen in other geriatric treatment studies for anxiety (e.g., Stanley et al, 2009;Wetherell & Gatz, 2001) and depression (Serfaty et al, 2009), we believe that increased use of informal therapeutic techniques, such as motivational interviewing and problem solving, can increase the retention of geriatric participants in treatment studies for HD.…”
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confidence: 58%
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“…In a group treatment for compulsive hoarding, Steketee and colleagues (2000) reported an attrition rate of 14.3% after 15 sessions (N = 7); 50% of the participants who completed the group treatment also completed 14 sessions of individual treatment. Tolin and colleagues (2007) (Steketee, Frost, Tolin, Rasmussen, & Brown, 2010;Tolin, Steketee, & Frost, 2007). Although the attrition rates reported above are not higher than those seen in other geriatric treatment studies for anxiety (e.g., Stanley et al, 2009;Wetherell & Gatz, 2001) and depression (Serfaty et al, 2009), we believe that increased use of informal therapeutic techniques, such as motivational interviewing and problem solving, can increase the retention of geriatric participants in treatment studies for HD.…”
mentioning
confidence: 58%
“…Treatment studies utilizing midlife samples reveal inconsistent attendance (Tolin, Steketee, & Frost, 2007), early termination (MataixCols, Marks, Greist, Kobak, & Baer, 2002), and poor compliance (Christensen & Greist, 2001) as potential factors contributing to decreased rates of treatment success. While research on the development of effective treatments is ongoing, there have been reports of several possible sources of interference with treatment completion, such as decreased motivation (Tolin, Steketee, & Frost, 2007), limited insight and resistance to change (Kim, Steketee, & Frost, 2001), and the sense that the hoarding symptoms are normal behavior (Christensen & Greist, 2001). …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Group CBT for hoarding improvement rates range from 10-21% (Muroff et al, 2010;Steketee et al, 2000), whilst individual CBT improvement rates range from 14-28% (Ayers et al, 2011;Steketee et al, 2010;Tolin et al, 2007). This calls into question why this is the case?…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therapy based upon the CBT model has been manualised . Uncontrolled (Tolin, Frost & Steketee, 2007) and controlled (Steketee, Frost, Tolin, Rasmussen & Brown, 2010) outcome studies do evidence empirical support for the model. However, when the CBT model has been tested in more varied clinical samples (such as in a geriatric hoarding), evidence indicates attenuated outcomes (Ayers et al, 2011), without necessary population specific alterations (Ayers et al, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 95%
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