Thank you
Evelyn for the alert, and
sparkle for the link.
moggyfan , I did find an archived copy of squalorsurvivors. See a post later in this thread for what you wanted.
Celeste Admin angelinahedgehog , I found some alternate links to what was on the original "Measuring" page, as follows:
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The following links show different methods of measuring degrees of squalor, clutter and hoarding.
Degrees of Squalor as described at the Squalor Survivors website.On this page, look specifically for the First, Second, Third, and Fourth Degrees of Squalor.
The main Squalor Survivors site is temporarily down, but you may find an archived copy here:
web.archive.org/web/20161108001316/http://www.squalorsurvivors.com/squalor/measuring.shtmlFor a non-truncated link to the same page go here:
tinyurl.com/jtr49vwStepping Out of Squalor came to be after the original Squalor Survivors forums owner retired the board, and we subsequently started the forums here at Proboards.
The Clutter-Hoarding Scale from the Institute for Challenging DisorganizationThis covers Clutter and Hoarding and repairs/safety.
(thingsinplace.com changed its name to standolyn.com)
standolyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/ICD_CHS_Final_Release_062911.pdf
The International OCD Foundation (IOCDF) has a resource center on Hoarding Disorder.
Some of the links are broken because their website is under renovations.
You can find alternate links to the same information below.The Clutter Image Rating ScaleThe Clutter Image Rating Scale used to be accessible at the International OCD foundation site.
That copy has more in-depth descriptions, but since the link is broken, you can find a copy here:
hoardingdisordersuk.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/clutter-image-ratings.pdfFor quick at-a-glance viewing, you can also find all the photos are visible on one page at the Smith College Dept. of Psychology (Randy O. Frost, Professor) website here:
(Randy Frost's Smith College website has a new link):www.science.smith.edu/departments/psych/rfrost/site/Hoarding_Images.htmThe Saving Inventory-Revised (SIR) questionnaireThe Saving Inventory-Revised is a 23-item questionnaire designed to measure three features of hoarding: excessive acquisition, difficulty discarding, and clutter. Scoring instructions are located at the end of the questionnaire together with a table of average scores of people who do not suffer from hoarding, as well as cutoffs for what the authors think indicates a probable hoarding problem.
The same Saving Inventory-Revised (SIR) -- 2013 edition, without scoring.at the Sketetee&Frost Oxford University Press website:
www.oxfordclinicalpsych.com/view/10.1093/med:psych/9780199334964.001.0001/med-9780199334964-interactive-pdf-004.pdfFor a non-truncated link to the same page go here:
tinyurl.com/hdqf9x7
The same Saving Inventory-Revised (SIR) -- undated (circa 2008-2012), with scoring.Archived copy from the old IOCDF website:
web.archive.org/web/20150319080659/http://www.ocfoundation.org/uploadedFiles/Hoarding/Resources/SI-R(ModifiedFormat).pdfFor a non-truncated link to the same page go here:
tinyurl.com/hn3ojq7The Hoarding Rating Scale (HRS)The Hoarding Rating Scale is a 5-item semi-structured interview that can also be used as a questionnaire. The five questions include questions about clutter, difficulty discarding, excessive acquisition, distress caused by hoarding and impairment resulting from it. Our initial studies suggest that a score of 14 or higher indicates a probable hoarding problem.
Hoarding Rating Scale (HRS), 2013 edition, without scoring.at the Sketetee&Frost Oxford University Press website:
www.oxfordclinicalpsych.com/view/10.1093/med:psych/9780199334964.001.0001/med-9780199334964-interactive-pdf-003.pdfFor a non-truncated link to the same page go here:
tinyurl.com/jgzgumuThe same Hoarding Rating Scale (HRS), 2010 edition, with scoring.Archived copy from the old IOCDF website:
web.archive.org/web/20150826083851/http://www.ocfoundation.org/uploadedFiles/Hoarding/Resources/Hoarding%20Rating%20Scale%20with%20interpret.pdfFor a non-truncated link to the same page go here:
tinyurl.com/hf53acpAdditional questionnaires on related topics of hoarding and functionality:at the Sketetee&Frost Oxford University Press website:
www.oxfordclinicalpsych.com/view/10.1093/med:psych/9780199334964.001.0001/med-9780199334964-appendix-22Randy O. Frost, Ph.D and Gail Steketee, Ph.D. are both contributors to the IOCDF site.