Title: Personality Disorders 101
1Personality Disorders 101
- Mike Pett MSWRSW
- Advanced Practice Clinician
- Complex Mental Illness Program
2Objectives for the Presentation
- -Common Pathways of Offending for SMI population
- -Personality Disorders Defined
- -Cluster B personality disorders
- Borderline, Narcissistic, and Anti-social/Psychopa
thic - -Treatment of Personality Disorders
- -Question Period
3Conventional Path to Offending Part 1.
Biological Temperament Family history Cognitive
ability
Psychological Antisocial attitudes
Social Poor parent-child relns Social learning
of antisocial behaviour
Conduct Disorder
Substance Use
ASPD/ Psychopathy
Andrews Bonta 2006
4Conventional Path to Offending Part 2
- Proximal motivations (the weather)
Motives material gain, sexual, power, jealousy,
revenge
Instrumental
Motives anger, intoxication, perceived threat,
emotional stressor
High Risk Individual
Reactive
Substances
Motives obtain drugs of abuse
Disadvantaged
Motives minor crimes for food, shelter
Peterson et al. 2010
5Paths to Offending in SMI
Positive Symptoms
- SMI vs. Gen Pop
- Higher rate of Conduct dis.
- Higher rate of ASPD
- Higher rate of substance
- Higher rate of poverty
- The direction of these relationships is unclear
- The proportion of each motivation is unclear
Serious Mental Illness
Disorganization
High Risk Individual (ASPD)
Instrumental
Reactive
Substances
Disadvantaged
6The False Dichotomy
7Personality Disorders 101
8Personality Disorder Clusters
- Cluster C (sad)
- Obsessive-Compulsive
- Avoidant
- Dependent
- Cluster A (mad)
- Schizoid
- Schizotypal
- Paranoid
- Cluster B (bad)
- Borderline
- Antisocial
- Narcissistic
- Histrionic
9Activity Personalities R Us
- Corporate Structure
- President ?
- Vice President ?
- Personnel ?
- Advertising ?
- Legal Department ?
- Research ?
- Customer Service ?
10Personalities R Us Corporate Structure
- President Narcissist
- Vice President Paranoid
- Personnel Borderline
- Middle Management
- Advertising Histrionic
- Research Schizo-typal
- Legal Department Anti-social
- Customer Service Passive-Aggressive
11Borderline Personality Disorder
- Recorded on Axis II of the DSM-IV
- Defined by the DSM-IV
- an enduring pattern of inner experience and
behavior that deviates markedly from the
expectations of the individuals culture, is
pervasive and inflexible, has an onset in
adolescence or early adulthood, is stable over
time, and leads to distress or impairment - Not the result of
- Cultural and social expectations
- Another mental disorder
- A substance or general medical condition
12Borderline Personality Disorder What is it?
- DSM-IV
- A pervasive pattern of instability of
interpersonal relationships, self-image, and
affects, and marked impulsivity that begins by
early adulthood and is present in a variety of
contexts.
13Borderline Personality Disorder DSM-IV Criteria
- Five or more of the following
- Frantic efforts to avoid real or imagined
abandonment - A pattern of unstable and intense interpersonal
relationships characterized by alternating
between extremes of idealization and devaluation - Identity disturbance markedly and persistently
unstable self-image or sense of self - Impulsivity in at least two areas that are
potentially self-damaging - Recurrent suicidal behavior, gestures or threats,
or self-mutilating behavior - Affective instability due to a marked reactivity
of mood - Chronic feelings of emptiness
- Inappropriate, intense anger or difficulty
controlling anger - Transient, stress-related paranoid ideation or
severe dissociative symptoms
14Borderline Personality Disorder Instability
Impulsivity
- Instability of
- Mood
- Self-image and identity overdetermined by the
environment - Interpersonal relationships
- Marked impulsivity (5 Ss)
- 1. Spending
- 2. Sex
- 3. Substance use
- 4. Speeding (reckless driving)
- 5. Satiety (binge eating)
- (6.) Suicidal/self-harm behavior (has its own
criterion)
15Borderline Personality Disorder Demographics
Course
- Female gt Male (31)
- 2 of community samples 15-25 of clinical
populations 13-56 of hospitalized substance
abusers - Completed suicide in 8-10 (particularly high if
comorbid substance use) - High rates of functional deficits, mental health
utilization costs - Rocky course during first decade of treatment
(high drop out rates) but many improve by second
decade of treatment
16Borderline Personality Disorder Etiology
- Most researched is Marsha Linehans biosocial
theory
Environmental Invalidating Caregivers
Biological Emotional Vulnerability
- High sensitivity/reactivity to emotional stimuli
- Slow return to baseline
- Indiscriminately rejects internal emotional
experiences - Punishes emotional expressions and
intermittently reinforces emotional escalation
Emotional Dysregulation
17Anti-social Personality Disorder vs. Psychopathic
Personality Disorder
18All psychopathic personalities are anti-social
but not all anti-social personalities are
psychopathic
19What is Psychopathy?
- Derived from Greek
- psych (soul, breath hence mind)
- pathos (to suffer)
- A constellation of affective, interpersonal, and
behavioral characteristics that include
grandiosity, a callous disregard for others, a
lack of empathy, and highly impulsive and
irresponsible behavior - Differentiation from Sociopathy and Antisocial
Personality Disorder
20Psychopaths in History
21- Superficial charm good intelligence
- Absence of delusions / irrational thinking
- Absence of nervousness
- Unreliability
- Untruthfulness and insincerity
- Lack of remorse or shame
- Inadequately motivated antisocial behavior
- Poor judgment / failure to learn by experience
- Pathologic egocentricity / incapacity for love
- General poverty in major affective reactions
- Specific loss of insight
- Unresponsiveness in general interpersonal
relations - Fantastic and uninviting behavior with drink
sometimes without - Suicide rarely carried out
- Sex life impersonal, trivial, and poorly
integrated - Failure to follow any life plan
22- Operationalized the construct of psychopathy in
the PCL and PCL-R instruments - Factor 1 Interpersonal and affective
characteristics - Factor 2 Impulsive and antisocial behaviors
- Prevalence of psychopathy
- 1 of general population
- 20-25 of prison population
- Robust predictor of violent and non-violent
criminal behaviors in adult male offenders (e.g.,
Harris, Rice, Cormier, 1991 Hemphill, Hare,
Wong, 1998 Salekin, Rogers, Sewell, 1996)
23Psychopathy
Factor 4 Antisocial Behavior
Factor 1 Arrogant Deceitful Interpersonal Style
Factor 2 Deficient Affective Experience
Factor 3 Impulsive Irresponsible Behavioral
Style
24Factor 1 Arrogant Deceitful Interpersonal Style
- 1. Glibness / Superficial Charm
- Insincere and shallow interactional style
- Charming, phony, or superficial
- 2. Grandiose Sense of Self-Worth
- Inflated view of abilities and self-worth
- Can appear domineering, opinionated, and arrogant
- 4. Pathological Lying
- Deceitful, lying just for kicks
- 5. Conning/Manipulative
- Uses deception to cheat, exploit, or manipulate
others - Misrepresentation for personal gain
25Factor 2 Deficient Affective Experience
- 6. Lack of Remorse or Guilt
- Lack of concern for the consequences of their
actions on others - 7. Shallow Affect
- Unable to experience a normal range and depth of
emotion - Play acting emotions
- 8. Callous/Lack of Empathy
- Disregard for the feelings, rights, and welfare
of others - Cynical and selfish
- 16. Failure to Accept Responsibility for Own
Actions - Usually have excuses for behaviors that hurt
others - Rationalize or minimize past transgressions
26Factor 3Impulsive Irresponsible Behavioral
Style
- 8. Need for Stimulation / Proneness to Boredom
- Chronic and excessive need for novel and exciting
stimulation exciting and risky activities on
the go - 9. Parasitic Lifestyle
- Exploitation of others for basic needs and
obligations - 13. Lack of Realistic, Long-Term Goals
- Inability or unwillingness to formulate plans and
commitments living day to day and changing
plans frequently
27Factor 3-cont
- 14. Impulsivity
- Behaviors are unpremeditated and lacking in
reflection doing things on the spur of the
moment opportunistic15. Irresponsibility - Habitual failure to honor obligations and
commitments to others
28Factor 4 Antisocial Behavior
- 10. Poor Behavioral Controls
- 12. Early Behavioral Problems
- 18. Juvenile Delinquency
- 19. Revocation of Conditional Release
- 20. Criminal Versatility
29Other Items
- 11. Promiscuous Sexual Behavior
- 17. Many Short-Term Marital Relationships
30Best Practices for Treatment of Borderline and
Anti-social personality disorder
31Dialectical Behaviour Therapy for Borderline
Personality Disorder (Linehan, 2007)
- Mindfulness
- Interpersonal effectiveness
- Distress Tolerance
- Emotion Regulation
32Best Practices for Psychopathy and Anti-social
Personality Disorder
- Nothing Works
- vs.
- What Works?
33Watch Dexter!
34Most Best Menu of Treatment Strategies
- Substance Use Treatment
- Pharmacological treatments for impulse
control/cravings. - I.M. medication for chronic non-adherence.
- Anger Management.
- Assertive outreach
- Crisis intervention
- Critical time intervention
- Volunteerism
35Most Best Treatment Options.
- CTOs, probation, bail orders as leverage points
to motivate recovery. - Drug Treatment Court/Mental Health Diversion in
cases of precontemplation/low motivation in terms
of mental health and addiction treatment. - Community placement should be in safe, pro-social
neighborhoods where exposure to criminal
activities and substance use is limited. - Re-training/Re-schooling
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37Questions and Comments