Research / Reports

The study aim was to test whether a 12-week publically rebated group programme, based upon Steketee and Frost’s Cognitive Behavioural Therapy-based hoarding treatment, would be efficacious in a community-based setting. Over a 3-year period, 77 participants with clinically significant hoarding were recruited into 12 group programmes. All completed treatment; however, as this was a community-based naturalistic study, only 41 completed the post-treatment assessment. Treatment included psychoeducation about hoarding, skills training for organization and decision making, direct in-session exposure to sorting and discarding, and cognitive and behavioural techniques to support out-of-session sorting and discarding, and nonacquiring. Self-report measures used to assess treatment effect were the Savings Inventory-Revised (SI-R), Savings Cognition Inventory, and the Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scales.
One size approach does NOT fit all when it comes to responding to the intersectionality of Indigenous women’s and children’s experiences with domestic and family violence.
80% of those released from sentenced detention in 2016–17 returned to supervision within 12 months
Levels of mortgage related stress for persons who are middle aged and over has dramatically increased in both the amount of debt and the degree of impact on the well being of those affected particularly women.

This research investigated the short and longer term housing aspirations and the housing aspirations gap among ‘emerging adults’ aged 18–24…

This research has found that there are many older renters struggling to the extent that they are doing without the…

Homelessness; older persons, over 55yrs of age; housing aspirations;

This report shows that many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people aged 50 and over have complex and varied needs….