By Anndee Hochman, For The Inquirer
“I am a shopper and a hoarder. I find reasons to keep things. The pandemic has absolutely made it worse. I used to be out. Now I’m home.”

YONG KIM / Staff Photographer
The group didn’t only change her hoarding habits; it shifted her mindset, even her financial outlook. “Now I make a plan with an end goal,” Theresa says. When she considers a new purchase, she asks herself: Will this add value to my life, or to my home? She finally unboxed the Breville Smart Oven, the Instant Pot, and the Vitamix blender she bought at the start of COVID-19.
“I have a lot more pride in myself now,” she says. “I’ve gotten rid of a lot of clutter all over. Sometimes I get frustrated — oh, God, I’ve still got more to go — but I just set up a schedule for it.
“I’ve realized that I can do this. I’m falling in love with my home again.”


YONG KIM / Staff Photographer
She may feel stigmatized, but she’s not alone.
While supply shortages and anxiety, especially in the early months of the pandemic, drove many people to panic-buy toilet paper and hand sanitizer, that type of hoarding was short-lived.
For those with hoarding disorder — a clinical diagnosis that includes an extreme reluctance to part with items and a level of accrual that renders living spaces unusable — the pandemic was a perfect storm. Isolation, stress, uncertainty, and grief — combined with extra time at home, the ease of one-click shopping, and the absence of visitors who might suggest curbing the clutter — exacerbated a problem that psychologists say affects up to one in 20 people in the United States.
Hoarding disorder, which affects people of all genders and races, can begin as early as adolescence and typically increases in severity over the life span; the average age of a person seeking treatment is 50.
A study in the April Journal of Psychiatric Research showed that hoarding disorder worsened during the pandemic. Of more than 800 respondents, nearly all from the United States, the number with clinically significant hoarding symptoms rose by nearly 4% during the pandemic. A smaller study, published in June in Frontiers in Psychiatry, showed COVID-era spikes in compulsive hoarding symptoms among 43 men in quarantine in Italy.
“Folks who were struggling with hoarding disorder before COVID were already existing with this extra layer of stress in their lives,” says Dara Leinweber, coordinator of the hoarding support program at Jewish Family and Children’s Services (JFCS). “So [the pandemic] was like adding fuel to the fire.”


THERESA / Special for The Inquirer
While local entities that offer support (some free, some with sliding-scale fees) for those with hoarding disorder — among them JFCS, Community Legal Services, and the Philadelphia Corporation for Aging — say it’s too early for hard data on hoarding behavior in the region, all have seen evidence of hoarding that was both exacerbated and more easily hidden during months of quarantine.
At JFCS, caseworkers received more inquiries about the hoarding program, which includes an annual webinar series, a 16-week support group called Buried in Treasures, and one-on-one case management, an intensive and long-term form of help for which there is a 10-month waitlist.


YONG KIM / Staff Photographer
Theresa joined the Buried in Treasures group in fall 2020 and began to set modest goals: Get rid of the old table and television to make room for a computer in her home office. Use brief work breaks to cull through papers. Give away the high heels, the extra towels, the size 2X clothes that swam on her after she lost weight. Buy decorative hat boxes to store socks, gloves, hats, and swimwear.
The group didn’t only change her hoarding habits; it shifted her mindset, even her financial outlook. “Now I make a plan with an end goal,” Theresa says. When she considers a new purchase, she asks herself: Will this add value to my life, or to my home? She finally unboxed the Breville Smart Oven, the Instant Pot, and the Vitamix blender she bought at the start of COVID-19.
“I have a lot more pride in myself now,” she says. “I’ve gotten rid of a lot of clutter all over. Sometimes I get frustrated — oh, God, I’ve still got more to go — but I just set up a schedule for it.
“I’ve realized that I can do this. I’m falling in love with my home again.”