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Hoarding Cats: How to Recognize Animal Hoarding

The practice of animal hoarding is a danger not only to the safety and happiness of cats, but also to the community in which the hoarding occurs. Toward end of the 20th century, animal welfare professionals, mental health experts, veterinarians, and other animal lovers began looking seriously at animal hoarding.

Among other things, they wanted to describe and classify the behavior in hopes of finding treatments to help those individuals affected by the behavior – and, in turn, save the lives of animals. Nearly 60% of animal hoarding cases are considered “repeat offenders” who have experienced treatment or intervention of some type in the past.

Here are some insights into what researchers have found and ways to spot hoarding situations in your community.

Conditions Associated with Hoarding

The public tends to think that animal hoarding only occurs with hundreds of animals, similar to many stories seen on the news. It’s possible, however, for similar behaviors and outcomes to affect homes with fewer animals if the level of care and condition of the animals are deteriorating. One person may easily live with a dozen or more animals who are healthy and happy while another person might be overwhelmed by three or four.

The working definition of hoarding includes these factors:

It is very common for individuals who show hoarding behaviors to become unaware of the degree to which care has deteriorated. They may be unaware of an animal’s needs and claim conditions are “not that bad,” or simply refuse to acknowledge signs of physical or mental distress in animals. During studies of hoarding behaviors, researchers have found that many people will develop rationalizations for their behavior.

Characteristics of Cat Hoarders

Early studies did find that hoarding behaviors happened most often in women (76%) and in people over age 60 (46%). Cats are the most common animals kept in large numbers in hoarding cases (65%). However, officials investigate cases of hoarding in people of all ages, incomes, locations, and professions.

About half of the time, individuals with hoarding tendencies live alone. It’s interesting to note that while social isolation is common it seems the isolation is a result of the hoarding situation, not a cause of it.

One psychiatric study of nine women with animal hoarding behaviors reported the women believed they had “special abilities to communicate or empathize with animals.” Some describe it as almost savior-like, where individuals believe they are the only one with the ability to care for the animals. Researchers also found that the role of animal caretaker also played a large role in the individual’s sense of identity.

In addition, it’s common to see hoarding behaviors in individuals with unstable or “broken” childhoods in which animals played a significant role in the child’s life. This shaky start may be why individuals with animal hoarding behaviors often view the world as a hostile place for people and animals.

A growing number of hoarding cases come from situations of animal rescue gone overboard. And, I don’t just mean individuals rescuing too many animals, but official non-profit animal rescues which turn into hoarding situations. Some estimates put rescue and shelter hoarding at 25% of new cases reported annually in the Unites States.

What Causes Cat Hoarding?

Psychiatric researchers have tried to fit animal hoarding into existing disorders, including delusions, dementia, addiction, attachment, anxiety, and obsessive-compulsive disorders. If mental health professionals diagnose a person with these or other disorders, they won’t necessary diagnose the hoarding disorder separately but attribute it to these other causes.

Studies have compared the behaviors of people who hoard objects and those who hoard animals. For example, both frequently result in cluttered, disorganized, and dysfunctional home situations – though animal hoarding is much more likely to result in squalid home conditions.

Among the differences:

There is one theory that looks for possible triggers for animal hoarding, such as the end of an important adult relationship, major health problems, or other traumatic event.

Signs of Cat Hoarding

If you’re active in a greater community of animal lovers, watch for these signs that someone you know may be developing hoarding behaviors:

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