| Literature DB >> 26401300 |
William Sledge1, Eric M Plakun2, Stephen Bauer3, Beth Brodsky4, Eve Caligor5, Norman A Clemens6, Serina Deen7, Jerald Kay8, Susan Lazar9, Lisa A Mellman4, Michael Myers10, John Oldham11, Frank Yeomans12.
Abstract
The objective was to review established literature on approaches to the psychotherapy of borderline personality disorder with specfic reference to suicide in order to determine if there were common factors across these efforts that would guide future teaching, practice and research. The publications from the proponents of five therapies for the treatment of suicidal behavior in individuals with borderline personality disorder (BPD), were reviewed and discussed by the members of the Group for the Advanced of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy Committee (GAPPC). Twenty nine published research and summary reports were reviewed of the specific treatments noted above along with two other reviews of common factors for this group of treatments. We used expert consensus as to the salient articles for review and the appropriate level of abstraction for the common factor definition. We formulated a definition of effectiveness and identified six common factors: 1) negotiation of a specific frame for treatment, 2) recognition and insistence on the patient's responsibilities within the therapy, 3) provision to the therapist of a conceptual framework for understanding and intervening, 4) use of the therapeutic relationship to engage and address suicide, 5) prioritization of suicide as a topic to be actively addressed whenever it emerges, and 6) provision of support for the therapist in the form of supervision, consultation or peer support. We discuss common factors, their formulation, and implications for development and teaching of psychotherapeutic approaches specific to suicide in patients with borderline personality disorder and note that there should be greater attention in practice and education to these issues.Entities:
Keywords: Behavior therapy; Borderline Personality Disorder; Common factors in psychotherapy; Psychodynamic therapies
Year: 2014 PMID: 26401300 PMCID: PMC4579509 DOI: 10.1186/2051-6673-1-16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Borderline Personal Disord Emot Dysregul ISSN: 2051-6673
Comparison of treatments for borderline patients when suicide is the complaint
| Topic | GAPPC common factors | BSSG candidate interventions | Links common principles | Bateman common characteristics |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment structure | Negotiate a frame for treatment in pre-treatment phase to clarify responsibility and establish a crisis plan | Clear treatment framework. | Increased activity of the therapist to provide a stable framework | Active stance by the therapist to validate and demonstrate empathy, generate attachment and create alliance |
| Defined strategy for managing suicide crises | ||||
| Patient role | Recognize and insist on patient’s responsibilities | Foster “greater sense of self agency” | Encourage increased activity, proactivity and self-agency for patient | |
| Therapist behavior | Provide the therapist with coherent conceptualization of meaning of behavior and interventions | Use theory and associated interventions to guide and ground treatment | Promote confidence based on model of understanding. | Manual provides recommended interventions. |
| Connection between action and feelings | Focus on connections between acts and feelings. | |||
| Explain model of pathology to patient to promote cognitive coherence. | ||||
| Therapeutic relationship | Use the therapeutic relationship and attachment to the therapist to engage suicide | Generate attachment, as above | ||
| Handling threat of suicide | Prioritize suicide as a topic to address in sessions | Empathic validation plus prioritization of self destructive behaviors | ||
| Support for therapist | Provide support for the therapist | Consultation, supervision, attention to countertransference | Manual supports the therapist |