| Literature DB >> 28861273 |
Daniel Flynn1, Mary Kells1, Mary Joyce2, Paul Corcoran3, Sarah Herley4, Catalina Suarez2, Padraig Cotter2, Justina Hurley2, Mareike Weihrauch2, John Groeger4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is challenging for family members who are often required to fulfil multiple roles such as those of advocate, caregiver, coach and guardian. To date, two uncontrolled studies by the treatment developers suggest that Family Connections (FC) is an effective programme to support, educate and teach skills to family members of individuals with BPD. However, such studies have been limited by lack of comparison to other treatment approaches. This study aimed to compare the effectiveness of FC with an optimised treatment-as-usual (OTAU) programme for family members of individuals with BPD. A secondary aim was to introduce a long term follow-up to investigate if positive gains from the intervention would be maintained following programme completion.Entities:
Keywords: Borderline personality disorder; Burden; Effectiveness; Family Connections; Family members; Grief; Long-term follow-up; Significant others
Year: 2017 PMID: 28861273 PMCID: PMC5575921 DOI: 10.1186/s40479-017-0069-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Borderline Personal Disord Emot Dysregul ISSN: 2051-6673
Overview of module content for FC programme
| Module | Content |
|---|---|
| 1 | Introduction (orientation and current information on research about BPD) |
| 2 | Family Education (psycho-education on development of BPD and available treatments, transactional model) |
| 3 | Relationship Mindfulness (emotional self-management, mindfulness, letting go of judgments and decreasing emotional vulnerability) |
| 4 | Family Environment (skills to improve relationship quality; letting go of anger and acceptance skills) |
| 5 | Validation (accurate and effective self-expression, how to validate) |
| 6 | Problem Management (defining problems, collaborative problem-solving, knowing when to focus on acceptance and change) |
Participant demographics of the FC and OTAU groups
| Variable | FC group ( | OTAU group ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | Male | 23 (45%) | 16 (55%) |
| Female | 28 (55%) | 13 (45%) | |
| Age | 18–20 | 0 (0%) | 3 (10%) |
| 21–30 | 7 (14%) | 3 (10%) | |
| 31–40 | 10 (20%) | 2 (9%) | |
| 41–50 | 11 (22%) | 11 (38%) | |
| 51–60 | 16 (31%) | 8 (28%) | |
| 61–70 | 5 (10%) | 2 (7%) | |
| 70+ | 2 (4%) | 0 (0%) | |
| Relative Type | Parent | 29 (57%) | 14 (48%) |
| Spouse/Partner | 14 (27%) | 9 (31%) | |
| Other | 8 (16%) | 6 (21%) |
Fig. 1Flow of participants through the trial
Baseline scores on outcome measures for the FC and OTAU groups
| Variable | FC M (SD) | OTAU M(SD) | t (df), |
|---|---|---|---|
| BAS Obj | 24.5 (7.3) | 20.2 (5.9) | −2.7 (77), .01 |
| BAS Sub | 26.5 (7.8) | 23.8 (5.6) | −1.6 (77), .11 |
| BAS Total | 51.0 (14.2) | 44.0 (10.4) | −2.3 (77), .02 |
| GAS | 49.9 (14.7) | 52.8 (13.4) | 0.9 (78), .39 |
| PMS | 19.6 (3.5) | 18.8 (4.0) | −.9 (76), .38 |
| CESD | 17.3 (10.3) | 17.2 (13.0) | −.05 (73), .96 |
Effects of gender, age and relative type on baseline scores of burden, grief, mastery and depression
| Variable | Ref. group | Female (vs. male) | 51 years + (vs. < 51 years) | Partner (vs. parent) | Other relative (vs. parent) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Male, < 51 years, parent)* | |||||
| BAS Obj | 18.8 (14.7 to 23), <0.001 | +4.9 (2.3 to 7.5), <0.001 | +1.8 (−2 to 5.6), 0.36 | +4.9 (0.6 to 9.1), 0.025 | −1.3 (−5.7 to 3), 0.549 |
| BAS Sub | 21.5 (17 to 26), <0.001 | +5.3 (2.1 to 8.5), <0.001 | +1.4 (−2.8 to 5.6), 0.521 | +2.5 (−2.2 to 7.2), 0.298 | −0.4 (−5.5 to 4.7), 0.867 |
| BAS Total | 40 (32 to 48), <0.001 | +10.4 (5.2 to 15.6), <0.001 | +3.4 (−4 to 10.9), 0.366 | +7.6 (−0.7 to 15.9), 0.071 | −2 (−10.6 to 6.6), 0.649 |
| GAS | 45 (36.4 to 53.6), <0.001 | +10.6 (4.8 to 16.5), <0.001 | 0 (−8 to 8), 0.999 | −1.3 (−10.2 to 7.6), 0.77 | +0.9 (−8.5 to 10.3), 0.853 |
| PMS | 18.8 (16.6 to 21), <0.001 | −0.9 (−2.6 to 0.8), 0.306 | −0.1 (−2.2 to 1.9), 0.899 | +1.7 (−0.6 to 4), 0.156 | +3.7 (1.1 to 6.2), 0.005 |
| CESD | 10.1 (2.9 to 17.3), 0.006 | +5.6 (0.4 to 10.7), 0.034 | +5.2 (−1.5 to 11.8), 0.131 | +5 (−2.5 to 12.5), 0.194 | +1.1 (−6.9 to 9.1), 0.783 |
*estimated effect, (95% C.I.), p value
Change in outcome measures and treatment effect at post-intervention
| Variable | FC group ( | OTAU group ( | Treatment effect Mean (95% CI), |
|---|---|---|---|
| BAS Obj | −5.3 (−7.6 to −3.0), <0.001 | −2.1 (−4.4 to 0.2), 0.071 | −3.2 (−6.3 to 0.0), 0.048 |
| BAS Sub | −6.3 (−8.9 to −3.6), <0.001 | −1.6 (−4.1 to 0.8), 0.19 | −4.7 (−8.5 to −0.8), 0.017 |
| BAS Total | −11.6 (−16.3 to −6.9), <0.001 | −3.7 (−8.2 to 0.7), 0.103 | −7.9 (−14.5 to −1.2), 0.020 |
| GAS | −9.5 (−13.6 to −5.3), <0.001 | −2.1 (−6.8 to 2.6), 0.388 | −7.3 (−13.1 to −1.6), 0.013 |
| PMS | 1.9 (0.8 to 2.9), <0.001 | 0.2 (−1.2 to 1.7), 0.739 | 1.6 (−0.1 to 3.4), 0.070 |
| CESD | −5.5 (−8.6 to −2.4), <0.001 | −2.0 (−6.4 to 2.4), 0.381 | −3.3 (−8 to 1.4), 0.170 |
Mean changes adjusted for gender and relative type
Fig. 2Adjusted means for participants in the FC and OTAU groups at each time-point for: a Objective burden; b Subjective burden, c Total burden, d Grief, e Personal Mastery, f Depression