The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Event to help tackle compulsive hoarding disorder in scotland

- Conor riordan

An event is to be staged for the first time in the UK to try to tackle a disorder which sees people store vast amounts of items and clutter up their homes.

Compulsive hoarding, where acquiring and saving objects takes over a person’s life, is a growing issue in Scotland, with an estimated 200,000 people affected by severe clutter.

As well as affecting a person’s health and well-being, the issue can become a public health problem and serious fire risk.

The conference, to be held in October, comes in the same year that hoarding disorder will become a newly-classified mental health condition.

Founder of Life-Pod CIC, a social enterprise which helps affected people, Linda Fay, said: “Until recently, health and social care teams were most likely to enforce ‘clear-outs’ of people’s homes.

“This is quite possibly the worst thing to do – as well as being extremely distressin­g for the sufferer, the recidivism (reoccurren­ce) rate following an enforced clear-out is 97%; making it an ineffectua­l exercise.”

“It is critical that those suffering with hoarding disorder are helped by trained profession­als who understand the complexiti­es of the condition.

“Scotland is already piloting new, multi-agency approaches, and this autumn we will host the UK’s very first hoarding conference – to explore the issue and showcase best practice.”

It is estimated the cost of clearing a house can be as high as £50,000, whilst the cost of removing and rehousing a child from a cluttered home can total £250,000.

According to Ms Fay, hoarding behaviours usually start in childhood and can be exacerbate­d by co-existing health problems and traumatic life events.

If not treated properly, hoarding gets worse with age and often leads to loneliness and isolation.

Hoarding, Health and Housing takes place at the Corn Exchange, Edinburgh, on October 4.

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