Although fear, humiliation or embarrassment may make it hard for you to seek treatment for kleptomania, it's important to get help. Kleptomania is difficult to overcome on your own. Without treatment, kleptomania will likely be an ongoing, long-term condition.
Treatment for kleptomania typically involves medicines and psychotherapy, or both, sometimes along with self-help groups. However, there's no standard kleptomania treatment, and researchers are still trying to understand what may work best. You may have to try several types of treatment to find what works well for you.
Medicines
There's little scientific research about using psychiatric medicines to treat kleptomania. And there is no FDA-approved medicine for kleptomania. However, certain medicines may help, depending on your situation and whether you have other mental health disorders, such as depression or substance misuse.
Your provider may consider prescribing:
- An addiction treatment medicine called naltrexone, which may reduce the urges and pleasure associated with stealing
- An antidepressant — specifically a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI)
- Other medicines or a combination of medicines
If medicine is prescribed, ask your health care provider or pharmacist about potential side effects or possible interactions with any other medicines.
Psychotherapy
A form of psychotherapy called cognitive behavioral therapy helps you identify unhealthy, negative beliefs and behaviors and replace them with healthy ones that can be used in different situations when needed. Cognitive behavioral therapy may include these skill-building techniques to help you control kleptomania urges:
- Systematic desensitization and counter-conditioning, in which you practice relaxation techniques and other strategies while in triggering situations to learn how to reduce your urges in a healthy way
- Covert sensitization, in which you picture yourself stealing and then facing negative consequences, such as being caught
- Aversion therapy, in which you practice mildly painful techniques, such as holding your breath until you become uncomfortable, when you get an urge to steal
Avoiding relapses
It's not unusual to have relapses of kleptomania. To help avoid relapses, be sure to follow your treatment plan. If you feel urges to steal, contact your mental health provider or reach out to a trusted person or support group.