Literature DB >> 22369165

Integrated treatment: a conceptual framework for an evidence-based approach to the treatment of personality disorder.

W John Livesley1.   

Abstract

Evidence that various therapies are effective in treating personality disorder and that outcome does not differ substantially across treatments suggests that it is time replace concerns about the efficacy of specific therapies and which form of therapy to use with an evidence-based approach that combines methods that work from all therapies. A framework is proposed for selecting and combining eclectic treatment methods and delivering them in a coordinated way. The framework has two components: (1). a system for conceptualizing personality disorder based on empirical knowledge about the structure, etiology, development, and stability of personality pathology to use as a guide to selecting interventions and planning the sequence in which they will be used; and (2), a model of therapeutic change based on the general literature on psychotherapy outcome and specific studies of PD treatments. The framework proposes that integrated treatment be organized around general principles of therapeutic change common to all effective therapies supplemented with more specific treatment methods taken from the different therapies as needed to tailor treatment to individual patients and treat specific problems and psychopathology. The coordinated delivery of such a diverse array of interventions is achieved by using a phases of treatment scheme that proposes that treatment focus on specific symptoms and problems is a systematic and orderly way according to their stability and potential for change.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22369165     DOI: 10.1521/pedi.2012.26.1.17

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pers Disord        ISSN: 0885-579X


  6 in total

Review 1.  Psychological therapies for people with borderline personality disorder.

Authors:  Jutta M Stoffers; Birgit A Völlm; Gerta Rücker; Antje Timmer; Nick Huband; Klaus Lieb
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2012-08-15

2.  A Bayesian Account of Psychopathy: A Model of Lacks Remorse and Self-Aggrandizing.

Authors:  Aaron Prosser; Karl J Friston; Nathan Bakker; Thomas Parr
Journal:  Comput Psychiatr       Date:  2018-10

3.  The burden of disease in patients eligible for mentalization-based treatment (MBT): quality of life and costs.

Authors:  Elisabeth M P Laurenssen; Hester V Eeren; Martijn J Kikkert; Jaap Peen; Dieuwertje Westra; Jack J M Dekker; Jan J V Busschbach
Journal:  Health Qual Life Outcomes       Date:  2016-10-12       Impact factor: 3.186

4.  Exclusion-Proneness in Borderline Personality Disorder Inpatients Impairs Alliance in Mentalization-Based Group Therapy.

Authors:  Sebastian Euler; Johannes Wrege; Mareike Busmann; Hannah J Lindenmeyer; Daniel Sollberger; Undine E Lang; Jens Gaab; Marc Walter
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2018-05-28

5.  Referral of patients with emotionally unstable personality disorder for specialist psychological therapy: why, when and how?

Authors:  Matthew Roughley; Amy Maguire; Grace Wood; Tennyson Lee
Journal:  BJPsych Bull       Date:  2021-02

Review 6.  Alcohol Use Disorder and Antisocial and Borderline Personality Disorders.

Authors:  Ashley C Helle; Ashley L Watts; Timothy J Trull; Kenneth J Sher
Journal:  Alcohol Res       Date:  2019-12-30
  6 in total

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