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Group Treatment for Hoarding Disorder Jordana Muroff (Assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, Boston University School of Social Work)

Group Treatment for Hoarding Disorder By Jordana Muroff (Assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, Boston University School of Social Work)

Summary

Group Treatment for Hoarding Disorder: Therapist Guide outlines a cognitive-behavioral therapy program for HD using a group model.

Group Treatment for Hoarding Disorder Summary

Group Treatment for Hoarding Disorder: Therapist Guide by Jordana Muroff (Assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, Boston University School of Social Work)

For the first time, Hoarding Disorder (HD) is now recognized as a distinct disorder in the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5), separate from OCD. HD has also received much more attention and exposure in recent years. Consequently, more people will be recommended for treatment, increasing the demand and need for clinicians who deliver this specialized intervention. Group Treatment for Hoarding Disorder: Therapist Guide outlines a cognitive-behavioral therapy program for HD using a group model. Clinicians deliver group therapy over 20 weekly sessions of 1.5 to 2 hours each. A single experienced clinician can lead the group or a co-therapy model can be used with two clinicians, one experienced and one in training. Groups of 6 to 8 participants: DT receive education about HD and about the CBT model DT discuss therapy goals and personal values DT practice motivational enhancement methods including identifying barriers to progress DT receive training in organizing and problem-solving about hoarding problems DT learn cognitive therapy strategies to reduce problematic hoarding beliefs and to replace acquiring with more adaptive behaviors DT practice sorting, removing clutter, and not acquiring, beginning with easier tasks DT and identify in-home supports. Final sessions focus on reviewing the most effective therapy methods, coping with change, and highlighting strategies for maintaining gains. Group members use the Treatment for Hoarding Disorder: Workbook, Second Edition to assist with practice exercises. All of the necessary forms and worksheets are provided in the books and online. Treatment proceeds in a flexible session-by-session fashion with attention to group process. Written for psychologists, social workers, psychiatrists, counselors, and psychiatric nurses, this Therapist Guide will promote effective group treatment of people with hoarding disorder.

About Jordana Muroff (Assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, Boston University School of Social Work)

Jordana Muroff, PhD, is an Assistant Professor at Boston University School of Social Work in the Clinical Practice Department. Trained in cognitive behavioral therapy methods (CBT), Dr. Muroff is a licensed social worker and trained psychologist with extensive clinical experience. Her research on mental health interventions has established the efficacy of group treatment for hoarding disorder. Patty Underwood, MSW, is a licensed independent clinical social worker in Massachusetts and a highly experienced clinician at Riverside Community Care, a large community-based mental health agency. She is a part-time lecturer at Boston University School of Social Work (BUSSW), teaching courses in clinical practice. She also serves on the Dean's Advisory Board at the Boston University School of Social Work. Gail Steketee, PhD, is Dean and Professor of the Boston University School of Social Work. Her research has focused on understanding the causes and consequences of obsessive-compulsive (OC) spectrum conditions, especially hoarding disorder, and on developing and testing evidence-based treatments for these conditions.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ; Chapter 1 Introduction ; Chapter 2 Group Formation and Assessment ; Chapter 3 Group Process ; Chapter 4 Session 1: Introduction and Education ; Chapter 5 Session 2: Model Building ; Chapter 6 Session 3: Motivation ; Chapter 7 Session 4: Goals and Treatment Planning ; Chapter 8 Session 5: Reducing Acquisition ; Chapter 9 Session 6: More on Acquisition ; Chapter10 Session 7: Exposure Practice for Non-Acquisition ; Chapter 11 Session 8: Decisions about Saving and Discarding ; Chapter 12 Session 9: More on Decisions about Saving and Discarding ; Chapter 13 Session 10: Skills Training for Organizing ; Chapter 14 Session 11: Organizing Paper ; Chapter 15 Session 12: Cognitive Strategies ; Chapter 16 Session 13: Cognitive Therapy Skills for Letting Go ; Chapter 17 Session 14: Coaching and Letting Go ; Chapter 18 Session 15: Non-Acquisition Practice ; Chapter 19 Session 16: Barriers to Progress ; Chapter 20 Session 17: Maintaining Systems and Gains ; Chapter 21 Session 18: Review of Treatment Methods ; Chapter 22 Session 19: Assessment and Review of Progress ; Chapter 23 Session 20: Graduation and Next Steps ; Appendices ; 1. Hoarding Interview ; 2. Hoarding Rating Scale ; 3. Saving Inventory - Revised (SI-R) ; 4. Clutter Image Rating (CIR) Instructions, and pictures of LR, Kit, BR ; 5. Saving Cognitions Inventory (SCI) ; 6. Activities of Daily Living for Hoarding (ADL-H) ; 7. Safety Questions ; 8. Home Environment Inventory (HEI) ; 9. Binder Information Sheet (Session 1) ; 10. Session schedule (Session 1) ; 11. Group Session Forms [samples for each session] ; 12. Group Session Form [blank] ; 13. Confidentiality contract (Session 1) ; 14. Hoarding Disorder DSM-5 Criteria (Session 1) ; 15. Clinician's Group Progress Notes ; 16. Clinician's Group Progress Note [Example] ; 17. Blank Hoarding Model (Workbook, Ch. 3, p.31) ; 18. Brief Thought Record (Workbook, Ch. 3, p. 37) ; 19. Clutter Visualization Form (Workbook Ch. 4, p. 44) ; 20. Unclutter Visualization Form (Workbook, Ch. 4, p. 45) ; 21. Table of Signals of Ambivalence and Strategies (Session 3) ; 22. Table of Motivational Enhancement Strategies (Session 3) ; 23. Advantages and Disadvantages of Change Worksheet (Session 3) ; 24. Instructions to Coaches ; 25. Acquiring Form (Workbook, Ch. 5, p. 52) ; 26. Acquiring Visualization Form (Workbook, Ch. 4, p. 46) ; 27. Thought Listing Exercise Form (Session 8) ; 28. Behavioral Experiment Form (Workbook, Ch. 7, p. 83) ; 29. Table of Problematic Thinking Styles (Session 12; Workbook, Ch. 8, p. 86) ; 30. Thought Record (Workbook, Ch. 8, p. 93) ; 31. Non-acquiring Help Card (Session 15) ; 32. Practice Form (Workbook, Ch. 4, p. 47) ; 33. Personal worksheet for managing barriers (Session 16) ; 34. Family Response to Hoarding Scale (FRHS) (Session 16) ; 35. Weekly Scheduler (Session 17) ; 36. List of Treatment Techniques (Session 18) ; 37. Certificate of completion (Session 20) ; References ; Readings and Resources ; About the Authors ; Index

Additional information

NLS9780199340965
9780199340965
019934096X
Group Treatment for Hoarding Disorder: Therapist Guide by Jordana Muroff (Assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, Boston University School of Social Work)
New
Paperback
Oxford University Press Inc
2014-04-17
384
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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