Laura, I hope others will read your post and offer their "more experienced wisdom" on this issue. I do want to say that I am both a hoarder and a child of a hoarder.
When we see someone, especially someone we love, living in a way that you have described, we desperately want them to change. We can drive ourselves nuts with understandable worry, anger, and all kinds of other emotions and reactions. We may be at our wits end (and beyond) trying to figure out how to "make them" see the light, change, stop what they're doing, get help, etc. We may cry and beg, we may try to reason with them, we may threaten things, and more. Many of the things we try to do either don't help, or sometimes they actually make the already bad problem worse. I know your husband's intentions are good, but my best guess is that even that threat is not likely to produce the results you so would like to see.
Many people on this board have recommended the following book (by Michael Tompkins and Tamara Hartl): Digging Out: Helping Your Loved One Manage Clutter, Hoarding, and Compulsive Acquiring.
This book is not for your parents. It's for you and your husband. The forward for the book is written by experts in the field of hoarding treatment, so it's not just "any" book. Before making a major decision like that, please consider getting the book and seeing what it has to offer you. Check out the reviews on Amazon and elsewhere. There are other resources on this website as well. Some other people who post here may also have some suggestions for you.
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