According to the DSM-5, Personality Disorders are characterized by “impairments in personality functioning and the presence of pathological personality traits”. Borderline Personality Disorder is one of ten personality disorders listed in the DSM-5. The DSM-5 lists several criteria that must be met in order for someone to be diagnosed with Borderline Personality Disorder. They are quoted as follows: Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) affects about 4% of the general population, and at least 20% of the clinical psychiatric population. (Kernberg and Michels, 2009) In the clinical psychiatric population, about 75% of those with the disorder are women. BPD is also significantly heritable, with 42-68% of the variance associated …show more content…
The next morning, MMM was introduced to her inpatient Psychiatrist. MM mentioned to her Psychiatrist that she had battled symptoms of depression throughout high school and had thoughts of harming herself, especially after a relationship would end. The ending of a relationship would be followed by feelings of abandonment, like the feelings she had as a child when her father left. She also expressed to her Psychiatrist that she felt that she was not loveable and that she would be alone the rest of her life. She expressed resentment towards her father for leaving, and towards her mother for making him leave. She even expressed resentment towards her ex-boyfriend, whom the recent suicide attempt was over, but stated that she would take him back in a heartbeat. In fact, she stated that she hated him, but couldn’t live without him. The Psychiatrist listened to MMM carefully, and diagnosed her with Borderline Personality Disorder. He recognized the common statement made by those with Borderline: “I hate you, please don’t leave me”. MMM was released after 72 hours into an outpatient program where she was assigned to a group therapy circle for those suffering from Borderline Personality Disorder. She also signed up for individual therapy with a therapist on-campus specializing in the treatment of Personality Disorders. It is up to MMM to follow-up with her treatment plan. Because her suicide attempt occurred on campus, the Dean of Students
What is Borderline Personality Disorder? Defined by the website www.borderlinepersonalitydisorder.com, “Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a serious mental illness that causes unstable moods, behavior, and relationships. It usually begins during adolescence or early adulthood.” One may wonder what can be the cause of this disorder. BPD can be detected by an in-person interview about the symptoms that are occurring. The input from family and close friends of the individual that is being treated can also help detect the symptoms. The causes for BPD are not fully
Definition Borderline personality disorder is a mental health disorder that impacts the way you think and feel about yourself and others, causing problems functioning in everyday life. It includes a pattern of unstable intense relationships, distorted self-image, extreme emotions, and impulsiveness. With borderline personality disorder, you have an intense fear of abandonment or instability, and you may have difficulty tolerating being alone. Yet inappropriate anger, impulsiveness, and frequent mood swings may push others away, even though you want to have loving and lasting relationships.
Today I chose to write about Borderline Personality Disorder. I chose this because it’s a disorder I have been struggling with my whole life. Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is a mental disorder that can be caused by chemical imbalances in the brain, early childhood trauma, and genetics.
Amad et al. used quantitative research by analyzing data to figure percentages and likely hood of borderline personality disorder running in families. Amad et al. choose patients 18 years or older with borderline personality disorder, the diagnostics were made according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual criteria. Meta-analyses, a method for combining study data from multiple studies, was performed if two or more studies
Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is a disorder that effects every day life for the patient. The DSM-5 (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual) has it listed under the personality disorders because it is not something that comes and goes with any type of pattern or cause, the person with BPD has to live with it everyday. It can effect everything from relationships to common day to day activities. Borderline Personality Disorder is a disorder that is a pervasive pattern of instability of interpersonal relationships, self-image, and affects, and marked impulsivity, beginning by early adulthood and present in a variety of contexts. (DSM-5, 2013)
Borderline Personality Disorder, often reffered to as BPD, is a mental disorder that causes unstable emotions and instability in relationships, poor self-image, and impulsive actions. With Borderline Personality Disorder, self-image is distorted, making a person feel inadequate or worthless. A person with BPD often pushes others away with their anger, impulsiveness and frequent mood swings, though they desire loving relationships. The cause of BPD is unknown, but is credited to genetic, family, and social factors. Risk factors for BPD are abandonment in childhood or in teen years, a disrupted family life, poor communication in the family, and sexual abuse. This personality disorder tends to occur more in women more so than men. The
In our modern era, there is a vast amount of people who suffer from mental health issues, such as Paranoid Personality Disorder (PPD) and paranoia. PPD involves a person who would experience peculiar thoughts, in which, could lead them to believe others are not to be trusted and are to be suspicious of. This can classified in what is called “Cluster A” of personality disorders and characterized as individuals having a disorder where they are
Borderline Personality Disorder is characterized by a number of different symptoms, most markedly with severe patterns of impulsivity, instability in interpersonal relationships, self-image and affect. There are a number of other symptoms associated with this disorder, such as:
“What does borderline personality mean, anyhow? It appears to be a way station between neurosis and psychosis: a fractured but not disassembled psyche. Though to quote my post-Melvin psychiatrist: "It 's what they call people whose lifestyles bother them,” (Kaysen, 2014). Borderline personality disorder is a very serious mental health disorder and it has been around for many years. It is, like the quote says above, people whose lifestyles bother them. They don’t have a lot of control over a lot of the emotions that they experience and it can be very harmful to the person.
Borderline personality disorder, also known as BPD is a mental health disorder that impacts the way you think, feel about yourself and others, causing problems functioning in everyday life ( Mayo Clinic, 2015). Borderline Personality Disorder first got its name when clinics, though of their patients as being on the border between neurotic and psychotic by showing symptoms of both. Experts today say that the term “Borderline Personality Disorder” is truly giving out the wrong impression, but they have yet created an accurate term for the disorder (MTN, 2016). BPD leads to a lot of unstable mood swings, poor self-image, and stormy relationships with family and intimate partners. People that live with Borderline Disorder results in bad behavior,
She has little to any true friends, and states that her friends and family were mean to her and that she rarely does anything or talks to them because they are “hateful people”. She also stated that she had been sexually assaulted more than once in her lifetime, which could have a negative impact and self-view of herself and her life. She also states that in her younger age she became suicidal too. She also engaged in regularly cutting herself, all of these symptoms being factors playing into borderline personality disorder.
Borderline Personality Disorder is characterized by impulsivity, unstable self-image, mood, and trouble with interpersonal relationships. One major characteristic is impulsivity, which is characterized by rapid responding to environmental triggers without thinking (or caring) about long term consequences (Paris, 2007). Some people may engage in self-injurious activities including attempting and completing suicide. People with borderline personality disorder have a highly unstable self-image or sense of self that is “impoverished and/or fragmented” (Butcher, Hooley, & Mineka, 2014). The central characteristic is affective instability, which is intense emotional responses to environmental triggers with delayed recovery to baseline emotional state (Butcher, Hooley, & Mineka, 2014). This disorder is different from Bipolar Disorder in terms of mood because these are rapid and drastic shifts from one emotion to another a few times a day rather than a few times a year. Some patients may experience several dysphoric states in one day including sorrow, panic, aversive tension, rage, terror, shame, and chronic feelings of emptiness and loneliness (Lieb et al, 2004). In addition, Lieb and colleagues (2004) described the levels of disturbed cognitions including overvalued ideas of being bad, experience of dissociation, delusions, and hallucinations (Lieb et al, 2004). With all these behaviors there is a tremendous amount of interpersonal
Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is a severe psychiatric condition, characterized by a set of learned behaviors and emotional responses to traumatic or neglectful environments, particularly in childhood. They are in most instances depicted as socially unacceptable and are often avoided by others. Introduced in 1938 by psychoanalyst Adolf Stern was the term “borderline”. This was used to categorize between psychosis and neurosis. During the time people considered to have neurosis were presumed to be treatable, while individuals assumed to have psychosis were suspected to be untreatable. Around the 1970’s the comprehension of BPD arose. There are many determining factors, but most frequently they are characterized by the individual’s extreme
Assessment of the patient with borderline personality disorder is inclusive of the patient's: (1) physical; (2) emotional; (3) cognitive; (4) social; and (5) spiritual characteristics. These are assessed based on the patient's: (1) subjective reports; (2) interview records; and (3) behavioral
Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is characterized by fluctuation of self-image, lack of stable interpersonal relationships and pronounced and unpredictable impulsivity. The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 5 (2013) also lists fear of abandonment, suicidal or self-harming behaviors, intense or inappropriate anger that is difficult to control as well as paranoid ideation or dissociative symptoms. Morcos and Morcos (2016) wrote that patients with BPD are often misdiagnosed with other trauma related disorders, such as PTSD, depression or bipolar disorder. According to Beatson, et al. (2016) there are additional issues in diagnosing older patients, as the criteria indicates that symptoms would have been seen early in the patient’s life, not later. Beatson, et al. (2016) also noted that there is a considerable lack of studies and literature concerning BPD in older patients, making the diagnostic process more difficult. In this case study we will be working with an older patient, one that was well into midlife before Borderline Personality Disorder was included in the DSM, to see if she fits the criteria for BPD and what treatment options might be available.