877 - ADDICTED Call our Addicted.com Lifeline 24 hours a day - 7 days a week

The best hope for your journey through recovery...

The best hope for your journey through recovery...

Login | Register



Compulsive Shopping Treatment Centers Yuma AZ

Compulsive shopping is finally coming out of the closet. First described by Bleuler in 1915 and then Kraepelin in 1924 (they labeled it oneomania from the Greek oneomai, to buy, and included it among other pathological and reactive impulses), it went largely ignored for the next sixty years. Read for more.

Yuma Treatment Center
(928) 344-4310
1290 West 8th Place
Yuma, AZ
Crossroads Mission of Yuma
(928) 783-9362
944 South Arizona Avenue
Yuma, AZ
Anne Walton NCC
(602) 685-6000 
Phoenix, AZ
Neal, Kristine
(623) 455-9189
11024 N. 28th Drive Suite 290
Pheonix, AZ
Treese, Douglas
(480) 821-7857
1256 W Chandler Blvd Suite 13
Chandler, AZ
Lois Faust Fazio
(928) 344-9894
661 East 32nd Street
Yuma, AZ
Behavioral Health Services
(928) 341-9199
106 East 1st Street
Yuma, AZ
Fort Yuma Alcohol and Drug Abuse
(760) 572-0232
1888 San Pasqual School Road
Winterhaven, CA
Professional Psychology Associates P.C
(602) 852-0911
4222 East Camelback Road
Phoenix, AZ
Kathryn Forsyth, NCC
(480) 838-4300 
Mesa, AZ
Data Provided by:
 

Provided By: 

Understanding Compulsive Shopping

Background

Dr. April Benson - 9/5/2007

Compulsive shopping is finally coming out of the closet. First described by Bleuler in 1915 and then Kraepelin in 1924 (they labeled it oneomania from the Greek oneomai, to buy, and included it among other pathological and reactive impulses), it went largely ignored for the next sixty years. Only in the last decade have we seen specific and persistent inquiry into the disorder-in the psychiatric literature, in studies of consumer behavior and marketing, and in the popular press. And although the study of compulsive buying is still in relative infancy compared with some of its psychological siblings-alcoholism, for example, or eating disorders or drug abuse-there is more and more evidence, both research and anecdotal, that it poses a serious and worsening problem, one with significant emotional, social, occupational, and financial consequences.

How many people are we talking about? Estimates vary. According to Faber and O'Guinn (1992), somewhere between one and six percent of the population may be full-fledged compulsive buyers. The American Psychological Association's Monitor (Mjoseth 1997) agrees, reporting that perhaps fifteen million Americans have little control over how much they spend or what they buy. Estimates in the popular literature go higher; they see a full ten percent of the population, perhaps twenty-eight million Americans, as problem buyers (Trachtenberg 1988). And nonpathological compulsive buying-a compelling need to purchase that is not self-destructive, but may become so-could exist in as many as a quarter of us (Nataraajan and Goff 1991). Richard Elliot (1994), who has written about the relationship between addictive consumption and the postmodern condition, suggests that as incomes rise and shopping becomes a leisure pursuit, more and more addictive shoppers will emerge. The same possibility is envisaged by Scherhorn (l990). No surprise, then, that diagnostic criteria for compulsive buying are being proposed to the American Psychiatric Association for possible inclusion in the next revision of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual.

As you will read, most shopaholics try to counteract feelings of low self-esteem through the emotional lift and momentary euphoria provided by compulsive shopping. These shoppers, who also experience a higher than normal rate of associated disorders-depression, anxiety, substance abuse, eating disorders, and impulse-control disorders may be using their symptom to self-medicate.

Underlying (or at least intensifying) the deeply felt need of problem shoppers is our nationwide outbreak of "affluenza," the modern American plague of materialism and overconsumption. This addiction to affluence and all its trappings underscores the reality that for every voice echoing Thoreau's famous plea, "Simplify, simplify," a hundred others cry, "Amplify, amplify!" (Sanders 1998). And amplify we do. The kind and number of shopping sites proliferates, and the gap bet...

Click here to read the rest of this article from Addicted.com