Experiences of Futility Among Nurses Providing Care to Patients With Borderline Personality Disorder in the Greek Mental Health System

Author(s):  
Chrysovalantis Papathanasiou ◽  
Stelios Stylianidis
Author(s):  
Krista Schultz ◽  
Sharan Sandhu ◽  
David Kealy

Objective The purpose of the current study is to examine the relationship between the quality of the Patient-Doctor Relationship and suicidality among patients seeking mental health care; specifically, whether patients who perceive having a more positive relationship with primary care physician will have lower levels of suicidality. Method Cross-sectional population-based study in Greater Vancouver, Canada. One-hundred ninety-seven participants were recruited from three Mental Health Clinics who reported having a primary care physician. Participants completed a survey containing questions regarding items assessing quality of Patient-Doctor Relationship, general psychiatric distress (K10), borderline personality disorder, and suicidality (Suicidal Behaviours Questionnaire-Revised-SBQ-R). Zero-order correlations were computed to evaluate relationships between study variables. Hierarchical regression analysis was used to control for confounding variables. Results The quality of the patient doctor relationship was significantly negatively associated with suicidality. The association between the quality of the patient-doctor relationship and suicidality remained significant even after controlling for the effects of psychiatric symptom distress and borderline personality disorder features. Conclusions The degree to which patients’ perceive their primary care physician as understanding, reliable, and dedicated, is associated with a reduction in suicidal behaviors. Further research is needed to better explicate the mechanisms of this relationship over time.


Author(s):  
Pamela L. Holens ◽  
Jeremiah N. Buhler ◽  
Stephanie Yacucha ◽  
Alyssa Romaniuk ◽  
Brent Joyal

LAY SUMMARY This study looked at the use of a group treatment known as dialectical behaviour therapy skills group (DBT-SG) to see if it was helpful for military personnel and veterans who had a variety of mental health disorders related to their service. The results of the study showed improvements in symptoms of borderline personality disorder, reductions in negative thoughts and feelings, and reductions in unhelpful behaviours. Results also showed improvements in all examined areas of functioning among participants, with the largest change occurring in the area of social functioning. The presence of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, or chronic pain did not impact results, but the presence of a substance abuse disorder did. Overall, the results provide preliminary support for DBT-SG as an intervention for borderline personality disorder symptoms among military and veterans, and perhaps particularly for persons who also have other mental health challenges, or persons considered inappropriate for other treatment.


2017 ◽  
Vol 25 (5) ◽  
pp. 460-465 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sathya Rao ◽  
Jillian H Broadbear ◽  
Katherine Thompson ◽  
Anna Correia ◽  
Martin Preston ◽  
...  

Objectives: Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is associated with frequent self-harm and suicidal behaviours. This study compared physician-assessed self-harm risk and intervention choice according to a (i) standard risk assessment and (ii) BPD-specific risk assessment methods. Methods: Forty-five junior and senior mental health physicians were assigned to standard or BPD-specific risk training groups. The assessment utilized a BPD case vignette containing four scenarios describing high/low lethality self-harm and chronic/new patterns of self-harm behaviour. Participants chose from among four interventions, each corresponding to a risk category. Results: Standard and BPD-specific groups were alike in their assessment of self-harm risk. Divergence occurred on intervention choice for assessments of low lethality, chronic risk ( p<.01) and high lethality, chronic risk ( p<.005). Overall, psychiatrists were more likely than their junior colleagues to correctly assess risk and management options. Conclusions: Although standard and BPD-specific methods are well aligned for assessing self harm-associated risk, BPD-specific training raised awareness of BPD-appropriate interventions, particularly in the context of chronic patterns of self-harm behaviour. Wider dissemination of BPD-specific risk training may enhance the confidence of mental health clinicians in identifying the nature of self-harm risk as well as the most clinically appropriate interventions for clients with BPD.


2016 ◽  
Vol 21 ◽  
pp. 110-119 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Ntshingila ◽  
M. Poggenpoel ◽  
C. P.H. Myburgh ◽  
A. Temane

There is limited understanding of the experiences of women living with borderline personality disorder. It was therefore decided to discover how women living with this disorder would tell their life story. For the researcher, who worked in a psychotherapy ward where most women were living with borderline personality disorder, the care of these women was of vital importance, as they were less understood by mental health care providers.The research aimed to explore and describe the experiences of women living with borderline personality disorder. A qualitative, explorative, descriptive and contextual study design was used. Data was collected through in-depth phenomenological interviews that focused on the central question, “Tell me your life story”. Eight participants living with borderline personality disorder were interviewed. Tesch's method for data analysis was used (Creswell, 2009:186), along with an independent coder. Measures to ensure trustworthiness and ethical principles were applied throughout the research. From the findings obtained by means of the interviews of women living with borderline personality disorder, it was evident that there were childhood experiences of living in an unsafe space, related to unhealthy family dynamics, boundary violations and educational challenges. They experienced chronic feelings of emptiness in their relationships with theself. They also presented with a pattern of unstable interpersonal relationships and compromised mental health, which was apparent through the early on set of mental problems, emotional upheaval, looking for emotional escape and having different triggerfactors. Lastly, all these women yearned for facilitated mental health.


Author(s):  
Alexander L. Chapman ◽  
André Ivanoff

Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a severe, complex, and costly disorder requiring comprehensive treatment. Correctional settings commonly include mental health treatment and on-site mental health clinicians providing psychosocial and psychopharmacological treatment; however, the mandate of prison settings in particular often conflicts directly with providing clinical care to those with complex mental health needs. The necessary emphasis on security, safety, and, in some cases, retribution, can create invalidating environments that both elicit and reinforce the serious behavioral problems often observed among those with BPD, such as self-injury and suicidal behavior. When effective treatments are available, considerable challenges emerge with regard to the training and preparation of clinical staff to treat and line staff to manage inmates with BPD. This chapter discusses these and other issues and provides suggestions for continued work to better understand and treat individuals with BPD in forensic settings.


Author(s):  
Beth S. Brodsky

Individuals diagnosed with borderline personality disorder (BPD) are high utilizers of mental health treatment and comprise a large percentage of both inpatient and outpatient psychiatric populations. Not only do they exhibit extreme interpersonal sensitivity and are quick to feel invalidated, rejected, and abandoned, they also present clinically with very challenging symptoms that have contributed to a stigmatization of the BPD diagnosis and the misconception that BPD is not treatable. Recently developed BPD-specific evidence-based psychotherapies incorporating theoretical and technical modifications to “treatment as usual” contribute to the destigmatization of the BPD diagnosis and to increased effectiveness in clinical management of the disorder. This chapter reviews the conceptualizations and interventions that facilitate the capacity for mental health providers to maintain an empathic therapeutic stance toward and positive engagement with BPD patients in order to keep patients engaged with and making progress toward their goals in treatment.


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