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Motivational Interviewing to Enhance Behavioral Change in Older Adults With Hoarding Disorder

Motivational Interviewing to Enhance Behavioral Change in Older Adults With Hoarding Disorder

Recruiting
60 years and older
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

This study will compare two behavioral interventions for hoarding disorder in older adults.

Description

Hoarding disorder is a psychological condition with a unique constellation of consequences for older adults, including increased risk of fire and dying in a fire, insect infestation, and medical problems. Dangers related to cluttered living spaces are exacerbated by reduced executive functioning, attention, and concentration. Hoarding psychopathology results from maladaptive cognitions (e.g., desire to keep items others would discard) and maladaptive behavioral patterns (e.g., avoidance of sorting/discarding items).

Extant treatments for hoarding have targeted fear reduction as the mechanism of change, either through cognitive-behavioral therapy focusing on cognitive restructuring or behavior therapy focusing on exposure therapy. Older adults have a lackluster response to cognitive restructuring for hoarding, and, although exposure therapy increases treatment response, both approaches require a lengthy six-month dose. Our preliminary work suggests that fear reduction may not be a universally relevant target mechanism for older adults, and that to be responsive to the specific needs of older adults, other mechanisms need to be identified.

Motivational interviewing is a technique that is already typically incorporated into hoarding treatment and has been demonstrated to increase motivation for behavioral change across a range of health conditions for older adults, including physical activity, diet, and disease management. Because sorting/discarding is at its core a health behavior that hoarding patients lack the motivation to engage in, motivational interviewing is likely to decrease hoarding severity by eliciting increased levels of sorting/discarding.

The proposed project will use a mechanistic clinical trials approach to determine if a four-month intervention combining motivational interviewing with sorting practice can engage the proposed target, motivation for behavioral change, when compared to a four-month dose of sorting practice alone in a sample of rural-dwelling older adults with hoarding disorder.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Aged 60+
  • Live within a 60-minute driving radius of Starkville, MS
  • Have a primary psychiatric diagnosis of hoarding disorder

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Major cognitive impairment
  • Active psychosis, drug use, or acute suicidal ideation
  • Concurrent psychotherapy focused on hoarding
  • Changed psychotropic medications within the past three months

Study details
    Hoarding Disorder

NCT05237466

Mississippi State University

26 January 2024

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