학술논문

Relationship between symptom severity, psychiatric comorbidity, social/occupational impairment, and suicidality in hoarding disorder
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Hoarding
Comorbidity
Functional impairment
Social functioning
Suicide
Behavioral and Social Science
Mental Health
Rehabilitation
Serious Mental Illness
Clinical Research
Brain Disorders
2.3 Psychological
social and economic factors
Mental health
Clinical Sciences
Psychology
Language
Abstract
Social and occupational functioning deficits contribute to overall disability in hoarding disorder (HD), and psychiatric symptoms are likely strong contributors. In turn, social/occupational impairment and psychiatric illness are known to contribute to suicidality. However, few studies have examined the relationship between these factors. We examined these relationships in 313 treatment seeking individuals with HD, measuring hoarding severity with the Saving Inventory, Revised and functional impairment with the Activities of Daily Living for Hoarding Disorder (ADL-H). We created a composite social/occupational function variable assessing employment, cohabitation, and marriage. A path analysis was used to assess the relationship between social functioning, occupational functioning, hoarding related functional impairment in activities of daily living, hoarding severity, psychiatric burden, and suicidality in HD. At least one lifetime psychiatric comorbidity was noted in 61% of participants. High rates of unemployment, living alone, never marrying or being divorced/separated, and lifetime suicide attempts were present. Hoarding severity and hoarding-related functional impairment were associated with social/occupational impairment, and, along with psychiatric burden, with suicidality in this population. These findings suggest that thorough psychiatric evaluation and assessment of suicidality is warranted for those with HD, and that hoarding-related functional impairment is closely related to measures of real-world social functioning.