The Mail on Sunday

Shopaholic?

As debt rises, calls for spending addiction to be classed as mental illness You might need medical help...

- By Clare Green

ADMITTING to occasional bouts of shopaholis­m might seem like a light-hearted confession resulting in little more than belt- tightening and spending less on the credit card.

However, shopping addiction could soon be recognised as a mental illness thanks to pivotal research that has shown the problem has distinct causes and characteri­stics.

Experts have welcomed t he news, which comes in the wake of internet gaming addiction being officially recognised by the World Health Organisati­on – and the first NHS diagnosis of a 15-year-old boy with the condition in June.

An official classifica­tion of shopping addition may lead to scrutiny of ‘hard sell’ tactics used by High Street and online retailers that encourage shoppers to buy.

Professor Astrid Muller, a clinical psychologi­st with a special interest in addiction at Hannover Medical School, Germany, said of the findings: ‘It’s time to recognise compulsive shopping disorder as a separate mental health condition, which will help us develop better treatments and diagnosis methods.’

Aniko Maraz, a shopping addiction specialist researcher at Humboldt University, Berlin agreed, saying there was now a need for ‘public preventati­ve strategies’ of the type that are used to help people quit smoking, drinking and, most recently, gaming.

The condition – compulsive buying disorder (CBD) – once came under t he umbrella term of impulse- control disorder, along with pyromania, an urge to start fires, and kleptomani­a, the urge to steal.

Sufferers of CBD often describe an increasing urge or anxiety that can only be alleviated when a purchase i s made. Research has suggested that up to six per cent of the population may suffer from ‘an uncontroll­able desire to shop and spend money’. Six in t en patients are women.

Aside from problems with debt, CBD may affect work and relationsh­ips, as sufferers spend an increasing amount of time shopping and also concealing their habit from partners.

The disorder seems to develop regardless of i ncome and t he items purchased by compulsive shoppers tend not to be expensive. Ho we v e r, ma n y c o mpu l s i v e shoppers buy in quantity, resulting in out-of-control spending. Anecdotall­y, patients often report buyi ng a product ‘ because i t was a bargain’.

Items may be returned or kept but never taken out of their packaging. Other shopaholic­s may attempt to sell their items on, or even give them away.

Research at Pennsylvan­ia State University involving about 400 students found that those who displayed traits of CBD also had similar preoccupat­ions with dieting and body image to sufferers of eating disorders such as anorexia and bulimia.

The researcher­s said that as items bought during a shopping binge are usually appearance- related, such as clothes or jewellery, it could suggest a strong desire for social acceptance.

Treatment includes antidepres­sants, psychother­apy and advice such as getting rid of credit cards, shopping with a friend or relative who doesn’t suffer from CBD, and finding meaningful ways to spend leisure time other than shopping.

Psychother­apist Anna Albright said: ‘With all addictions, proximity to the substance or behaviour you are addicted to is problemati­c.

‘People are lured by advertisin­g and marketing emails. It’s so easy to go online now and click to buy and feel that pleasure of buying.

‘The single biggest thing I advise patients to do is unsubscrib­e from those store newsletter­s, stop buying magazines. It’s important to recognise there is a problem and seek help in finding alternativ­e coping strategies.’

 ??  ?? BAGS OF TROUBLE: Spending can get out of control
BAGS OF TROUBLE: Spending can get out of control

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