descriptors “frequent flyers” “help-rejecting complainers”

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Page 1: Descriptors “frequent flyers” “help-rejecting complainers”
Page 2: Descriptors “frequent flyers” “help-rejecting complainers”
Page 3: Descriptors “frequent flyers” “help-rejecting complainers”

Descriptors

• “frequent flyers”

• “help-rejecting complainers”

Page 4: Descriptors “frequent flyers” “help-rejecting complainers”
Page 5: Descriptors “frequent flyers” “help-rejecting complainers”

Descriptors

• “frequent flyers”• “help-rejecting complainers”

• emotional hypochondriacs (secondary gain)

• egocentric • irresponsible, fickle

• “love intoxicated”

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Sources of Stigma

• Reaction to anger, neediness (countertransference)

• The perception of willful treatment resistance (“help rejecting complainers”)

Page 7: Descriptors “frequent flyers” “help-rejecting complainers”

“Negative Therapeutic Reactions”

a) Unconscious guilt

b) Unconscious envy – need to destroy

therapists offerings

c) Unconscious identification with a

sadistic object

Kernberg, OF 1977

Page 8: Descriptors “frequent flyers” “help-rejecting complainers”

Sources of Stigma

• BPDs self concept: “bad”, “evil”, “damaged”, “small child” (Zanarini et al. 2001)

• Reaction to anger, neediness (countertransference)

• The perception of willful treatment resistance (“help rejecting complainers”)

• Cross-sectional exposure (“frequent flyers”)

• Misinformation about heritability and prognosis

• Unrealistic expectations of competence

Page 9: Descriptors “frequent flyers” “help-rejecting complainers”

Consequences of Stigma

• avoidance and misinformation by professionals

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“Despite its prevalence, enormous public health costs, and the devastating toll it takes on individuals, families, and communities, [borderline personality disorder] only recently has begun to command the attention it requires”.

House Resolution 1005, April 1, 2008

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Consequences of Stigma

• an “unwanted diagnosis” by patients confirming their worst fears about themselves

• avoidance and misinformation by professionals

• under-utilization of the diagnosis (~ 2-6% in one OPC)

• failure to provide adequate didactic training or capable clinical supervision

• lack of parity; fair reimbursement

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“I dread being diagnosed as borderline. It conveys that I’m malicious and manipulative.”

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REPONSES TO DIAGNOSIS OF BPD(N = 30)

WORSE BETTER

Shame

Likability

Hope

Overall

Rubovszky et al.

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Psychoeducation for BPD

- 30 with workshop about BPD vs. 20 wait listed- PE decreases impulsivity and unstable relations over next 12 weeks- “a useful and cost efficient form of pre-treatment”

Zanarini & Frankenburg, JPD 2008

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Minimal BPD Didactic Training Objectives(? 6 Hours)

i) Knowledge of the DSM diagnostic criteria and their meaningii) Awareness of its prognosis and heritabilityiii) How to assess and manage deliberate self- harm and suicidal threatsiv) The role and liabilities of medicationv) The role and outcomes from BPD-specific therapies

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Four Models About the Interface between MDD & BPD And their Implications about Course

BPD is Primary: BPD can cause 2 signs and symptoms of MDD; its improvements will be followed by a decrease in MDD

MDD is Primary: MDD can cause 2 BPD Phenomenology; its improvements will be followed by a decrease in BPD

BPD & MDD are Unrelated: Changes in the course in either disorder will not effect the other

Overlapping Etiology: Changes in either disorder will effect the course of the other disorder; but will do so weakly or inconsistently

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AD COOCCURRENCE IN BPD

No. BPD % with AD % General

Type AD No. Studies Subjects All (CLPS****) Population*

MDD** 7 1122 44-53 (50%) 17%

Bipolar I*** 8 1006 9 (12%) 1.6%

Bipolar II*** 6 436 11 (8%) 2-3%

Cyclothymic*** 2 404 4% 1%

* Kessler et al., 1994 ** Koenigsberg et al. 1999; Gunderson et al. 2001 *** Paris et al. 2005* *** McGlashan et al. 2000

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BPD COOCCURRENCE IN AD

No. AD Type AD No. Studies Subjects % with BPD

MDD* 6 1005 10-15%

Bipolar I** 12 830 11%

Bipolar II** 3 137 16%

* Koenigsberg et al. 1999; Gunderson et al. 2001** Paris et al., 2005

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FAMILY STUDIES

Increased Prevalence in RelativesProbands MDD Bipolar I Bipolar II BPD

MDD YES* Yes* ? ?

Bipolar I Yes* YES* Yes* No

Bipolar II Yes Yes* YES ?

BPD ? No ? YES

*Replicated Family Study data

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Cross-lagged Panel Analysis Relating Borderline and Depressive Psychopathology over 3 Years (N =

570)

BOR_B

DEP_B

BOR_6

DEP_6

BOR_12

DEP_12

BOR_24

DEP_24

BOR_36

DEP_36

.75*** .78*** .68*** .81***

-.08 .38*** .38*** .33***

.20*** .09* .17*** .11*

.01 .06 .04 .04

Note: BPD = Borderline features, assessed at Baseline (B) and 6, 12, 24 and 36 month follow- alongs; DEP = Depression diagnostic status assessed at these intervals. ***p <.001, **p <.01, *p <.05.

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INTERACTIONS OF AXIS I WITH BPD

Effect Co-Occurring Axis I Disorder

↓ BPD Course

↓ Axis I Course

↑ Med Use

Subst Ab

NO

YES

?

MDD

?

YES

YES

Bipolar

NO

YES

YES

ED

NO

YES

?

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MDD and BPD overlap descriptively, but when co-occurring BPD is primary

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BPD & BIPOLAR DISORDERS

% BPD with Bipolar I & II 20%

% Bipolar I with BPD 11%

% Bipolar II with BPD 16%

% BPD who become bipolar 10%Gunderson et al. 2006

Page 25: Descriptors “frequent flyers” “help-rejecting complainers”

FAMILY STUDIES

Increased Prevalence in RelativesProbands MDD Bipolar I Bipolar II BPD

MDD YES* Yes* ? ?

Bipolar I Yes* YES* Yes* No

Bipolar II Yes Yes* YES ?

BPD ? No ? YES

*Replicated Family Study data

Page 26: Descriptors “frequent flyers” “help-rejecting complainers”

New Onsets of Bipolar I and II in Borderline and Other Personality Disorder Samples

BPD (N = 164) OPD (N = 401)

Bipolar I 7 (4.3%) 6 (1.8%)

Bipolar II 6 (3.7%) 6 (1.8%)

Bipolar I and II 13 (7.9%) 12 (3.1%)

* Two patients have onsets of both Bipolar I and II

Page 27: Descriptors “frequent flyers” “help-rejecting complainers”

INTERACTIONS OF AXIS I WITH BPD

Effect Co-Occurring Axis I Disorder

↓ BPD Course

↓ Axis I Course

↑ Med Use

Subst Ab

NO

YES

?

MDD

?

YES

YES

Bipolar

NO

YES

YES

ED

NO

YES

?

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Bipolar D and BPD overlap descriptively, but not familiarly, and when co-occurring BPD is independent

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BPD & Bipolar Disorder Diagnoses∙ Bipolar disorder is frequently overutilized (only 57% were confirmed with SCID)∙ 26% of false + Bipolar patients have BPD∙ 40% of BPD patients had false + Bipolar dx∙ Overuse of Bipolar dx is 2° to expected response to meds and the extensive marketing of mood stabilizers∙ Underuse of BPD is 2° to it’s lack of a medication–based therapy and its need for psychosocial treatment

Zimmerman et al. J Clin Psychiatry Jan 2010

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Overview

• Treatment of BPD is not done

consistently or well

• Most clinicians don’t like treating

BPD patients

• There is a shortage of well-trained

BPD treaters

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TRENDS IN TREATMENT OF BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER

• From Psychoanalytic Primacy to Multiple Modalities

(notably psychoeducation, cognitive/behavioral and psychopharmacological)

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TRENDS IN TREATMENT OF BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER

• From Possible Improvement to Probable Remission

• From Psychoanalytic Primacy to Multiple Modalities

(notably psychoeducation, cognitive/behavioral and psychopharmacological)

• From Clinical Expertise to Evidence-based

• From Generic to Disorder-specific

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THE FRAMEWORK FOR EXPECTABLE CHANGES

Areas of Relevant ExpectableDisturbance Interventions Time for ChangeSubjective state • Concerned attention, Hrs./Weeks Dysphoric feelings validation

• Reality testing • Problem solving

• MedicationBehavior • Clarification (esp. in-Rx months

examples) of defense purpose and maladapttive consequences

Interpersonal Style • Confrontation 6-18 months• Pattern recognition• Here-and-now interactional analysis

Intrapsychic • Defense and transference analysis >2 years Organization • Corrective experiences, real

relationships

From Gunderson, 2001

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Behavioral PSA

DBT SFT MBT TFP

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DBT

• Most influential

• Most validated

• Most understandable/learned

• Most accessible

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DBT TFP MBT

Behavioral focus + - -

Cognitive focus - - +

Transference focus - + -

Interpretation - + -

Defense analyses - + +

Support + - +

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Effective Manualized BPDTreatments Show:

1. They are better than TAU.

2. BPD patients require specifiably different and

disorder-specific interventions.

3. PSA therapy can be manualized –

standardized and replicated (up to a point)

4. Adherence and competence can be measured and

shown to correlate with effectiveness.

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Mentalization: a common theme of all therapies for BPD

• All psychotherapies develop an interactional matrix in which the mind becomes a focus

• Therapists consider the patient by communicating their representations to them

• experience of patient is of another human having their mind in mind Process more important than content

Adapted from Bateman, 2004

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Are EBT’s Worth Learning:

1. Will I do better by my next patient as a

result of the training?

2. Is the increment of increased

effectiveness worth the time and expense

of getting trained?

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FIVE SHARED CHARACTERISTICS OF EFFECTIVE THERAPIES (DBT, TFP, MBT,

SFT) FOR BPD

- Structure (goals, roles)- Coherent theory with trained practitioners (self- selected)- Active: support and challenge- Focus on feelings recognition sources (chain analyses) experiencing

- Countertransference: recognition & management

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WHY DO THIS WORK?

• Pride in skills (“If you can treat borderline patients, you can treat anyone”)• Personal growth• Having a highly personal, deeply appreciated, life-changing role