Transcript Chapter 10

Chapter 10
Personality Disorders
Copyright © 2009 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier Inc.
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Concept of Personality and
Personality Disorders
• Personality is the “style” of how one deals
with the world
• Personality traits
– Stylistic peculiarities of how one deals with
world
• Personality disorders
– Diagnosed under Axis II in DSM-IV-TR
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General Characteristics of
Personality Disorders
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Inflexible, maladaptive responses to stress
Disability in working and loving
Avoidance and fear of rejection
Blurred boundaries between self and other
Insensitivity to needs of others
Demanding and fault finding
Lack of accountability
Evoke intense interpersonal conflict
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Personality Disorders:
General Information
• Prevalence
– Studies indicate 14.8% of a national sample
population surveyed met criteria for at least
one personality disorder
• Excluded from this study: borderline, schizotypal,
and narcissistic personality disorders
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Personality Disorders:
General Information
• Comorbidity
– Often more than one personality disorder
diagnosed
– Axis I disorders common: substance abuse,
somatization, eating disorders, PTSD,
depression, and anxiety disorders
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Biological Theories of
Personality Disorders
• No single cause identified
• Genetics
– Seem to play role in schizotypal, schizoid, and
paranoid personality disorders
• Neurobiological factors
– Brain imaging suggests borderline personality
disorder related to abnormality in prefrontal,
corticostriatal and limbic systems
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Other Theories Related to
Personality Disorders
• Psychological
– Childhood abuse and trauma associated with all
disorders
• Borderline: sexual abuse common
• Cultural considerations
– Native Americans, African Americans at
increased risk
– Other risk factors
• Young adult with low socioeconomic status, divorced,
separated, widowed, or never married
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Understanding DSM-IV-TR Clusters of
Personality Disorders
• Cluster A: odd or eccentric behaviors
– Related to schizophrenia
• Cluster B: dramatic, emotional, or erratic
behaviors
– Manipulation is common defense mechanism
– Tendency to blame others for one’s problems
• Cluster C: anxious or fearful behaviors
– Related to Axis I anxiety disorders
– Internalize blame for problems in life
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Cluster A:
Paranoid Personality Disorder
• Believe others are lying, cheating, or
exploiting them
• Perceive hidden malicious meaning in
benign comments
• Inability to work collaboratively with others
• Emotionally detached
• Hostile to others
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Cluster A:
Schizoid Personality Disorder
• Neither desires nor enjoys human
relationships
• Fixated on personal thought/fantasies
• Demonstrates emotional coldness,
detachment, and flat affect
• Indifferent to praise or criticism
• Chooses solitary activities
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Cluster A:
Schizotypal Personality Disorder
• Behavior or appearance is odd, eccentric,
or peculiar
– Odd, elaborate style of dressing, speaking,
interacting
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Magical thinking manifested
Unusual perceptual experiences
Lacks close friends
Excessive and unrelieved social anxiety
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Cluster B:
Antisocial Personality Disorder
• Chronic irresponsibility and unreliability
• Lack of regard for law and rights of others
• Persistent lying and stealing for personal
gain
• Conning others for personal gain
• Lack of remorse for hurting others
• Reckless disregard for others’ safety
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Cluster B:
Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD)
• Difficulty controlling emotions
• Stormy relationships with anger and
fighting
• Persistent unstable self-image
• Use of splitting (idealizing and devaluing
same person)
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Cluster B:
Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD)
• Frantic efforts to avoid real/perceived
abandonment
• Dramatic mood shifts, changes in opinions
and plans
• Impulsive, self-damaging behaviors
– Recurrent suicide attempts or self-mutilation
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Cluster B:
Histrionic Personality Disorder
• Attention grabbing, self-dramatizing
expression of emotions
• Sexually provocative clothing/behaviors
• Excessive concern with appearance
• Extreme sensitivity to others approval
• False sense of intimacy with others
• Constant sudden emotional shifts
• Impressionistic speech lacking detail
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Cluster B:
Narcissistic Personality Disorder
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Inflated sense of self-importance
Constant attention-grabbing behavior
Manipulation of others
No regard for feelings of others
Arrogant manner toward others
Unreasonable expectation for special
treatment
• Often envious of others with belief that
others are envious of him/her
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Cluster C:
Avoidant Personality Disorder
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Hypersensitive to criticism/rejection
Self-imposed social isolation
Preoccupied with being criticized/rejected
Strongly wants relationship but shies away
Avoids occupation involving interpersonal
contact
• Views self as socially inept, inferior
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Cluster C: Obsessive-Compulsive
Personality Disorder
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Preoccupied with details, rules, lists
Perfectionist
Unable to share responsibility with others
Devoted to work, exclusion of pleasurable
activities
• Financial stinginess
• Inability to discard useless objects
• Discomfort with emotions and
relationships person can’t control
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Cluster C:
Dependent Personality Disorder
• Difficulty with decision making
• Others assume responsibility for person’s
life
• Fear of disagreeing with others
• Preoccupied with fear of being left alone
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Nursing Process:
Assessment Guidelines
• Self-assessment essential
– Dealing with people with personality disorder
is often difficult, challenging, frustrating
• Take full medical history, check for past
abuse issues, substance use
• Determine suicidal/homicidal thoughts
• Relate personality functions to individual’s
ethnic/cultural background
• Determine recent important loss
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Nursing Process: Diagnosis and
Outcomes Identification
• Common nursing diagnosis assigned
– Ineffective coping
– Risk for other-directed violence
– Risk for suicide
– Risk for self-mutilation
• Outcomes Identification
– Recognize that change may be slow, occur
with trial and error
– Establish modest, obtainable goals
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Nursing Process:
Planning and Implementation
• Planning
– People with personality disorder seen in
health care setting for other reasons
• Implementation
– Nurse needs to understand difficulty with
creating therapeutic relationship with patient
• Give choices
• Orient patient to reality
• Teach behaviors that build on existing skills
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Interventions for Patient with
Personality Disorder
• Combine limit-setting, trustworthiness, and
dealing with manipulation with own natural
self (therapeutic use of self)
• Use established interventions for:
– Manipulative behaviors
– Impulsive behaviors
– Aggressive behaviors
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Nursing Intervention: Milieu Therapy
• Primary goal
– Affect management in a group setting
• Therapeutic tools
– Community meetings, problem-solving
groups, coping skills groups, and socializing
groups
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Treatment for Personality Disorders:
Psychotherapy
• Psychodynamic psychotherapy
– Works toward insight development
• Cognitive-behavioral therapy
– Helps patient recognize faulty thinking and
influence on problematic behaviors
• Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT)
– Developed by Marsha Linehan (1993) for
patients with borderline personality disorder
– Focus on stabilizing patient and achieving
behavioral control
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Treatment for Personality Disorders:
Medications
• Benzodiazepines (BZAs) not appropriate
because of dependency issues
• Use medications with low toxicity
– Antidepressants (SSRIs)
– Lithium carbonate
– Anticonvulsants
– Low-dose antipsychotics
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Nursing Process: Evaluation
• May be difficult because patient may not
remain in treatment long enough to see
results
• Specific, short-term outcomes may be
accomplished
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