Yorkshire Post

Many seek help over surge in ‘hoarding’

- SUSIE BEEVER NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: susie.beever@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

Cases of hoarding have risen over the past year, as many have been forced to “confront their problems”, says a charity.

Organisers who are running support for people with the recognised disorder say that they have seen a huge increase in reported cases since the first lockdown.

CASES OF hoarding have risen over the past year, as many have been forced to “confront their problems”, says a charity.

Organisers running support for people with the recognised disorder, where a person struggles to part with possession­s and accumulate­s it to the point of being overwhelme­d, say they have seen a huge increase in reported cases since the first lockdown, but that they expect the true extent of the issue to become more apparent over the coming months and years.

The combinatio­n of spending more time at home or people moving back in with parents during the lockdown, alongside the rise in loneliness, boredom and grief have been contributi­ng to the rise in cases, said Jo Cavalot and Jo Cooke, who run Hoarding Disorders UK.

Based in Sheffield, Ms Cavolot said she helped 193 people last year with a £10,000 lottery grant after noticing a surge in calls, and that most cases they receive are reported by people concerned about their parents.

Hoarding was officially recognised as a disorder by the World Health Organisati­on in 2018 and an estimated 1.2 million in the UK struggle with some form of it.

Although it is commonly linked to underlying psychologi­cal problems relating to loss or trauma, hoarding can also present physical safety risks with one in three house fire deaths involving cluttered homes.

“Some people experience what we call ‘clutter blindness’, meaning they just can’t see the clutter they have accumulate­d and that makes it very difficult to face up to the problem” said Ms Cavolot, who has been helping people with the problem since 2017.

“For many, it is a safety and control issue if you have suffered loss or a traumatic experience.

Often, people build up a nest or a wall around them for security and they feel safe and cocooned in that.”

Jo Cooke, who is the charity’s director, said the past year had created voids in many people’s lives which hoarding items can fill.

“There is very much the mentality of, ‘people hurt me but stuff can’t’,” she said.

“Lockdown gave people the opportunit­y of suddenly having time on their hands to confront the space around them.

“The anguish and anxiety that has come from Covid-19 means they have become almost paralysed, and if anything that has validated their own behaviour and made them think, ‘well, I knew I needed those 500 loo rolls’. And then they go out and buy more.”

Ms Cavolot said that the possibilit­y of hosting support groups again in the near future will be a benefit, while support from councils in South Yorkshire has allowed them to make “positive strides forward” to help people.

“People who hoard get used to their environmen­t, so change needs to happen quite slowly.”

There is very much the mentality of, ‘people hurt me but stuff can’t’. Jo Cooke, director the charity Hoarding Disorders UK.

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