| Literature DB >> 35637499 |
Pauline Klein1, A Kate Fairweather2, Sharon Lawn3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The rising prevalence of Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) and suicidality represents substantial health burden worldwide. People with BPD experience high rates of crisis presentations and stigma when accessing health services. Educational interventions designed to modify health practitioners' attitudes and practice in treating people with BPD may assist in addressing this stigma. The current review aimed to identify and explore existing educational interventions designed to modify health practitioners' attitudes and practice in BPD; and determine what impact educational interventions have on improving health practitioners' responses towards people with BPD.Entities:
Keywords: Borderline personality disorder; Community-based services; Crisis care; Education and training; Evidence-based practice; Health services; Healthcare system; Integrative review; Structural stigma; Suicidality
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35637499 PMCID: PMC9150362 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-022-01960-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Eligibility criteria
| Population, Concept, Context [ | |
|---|---|
| Population | Health practitioners including, psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers, mental health nurses, general practitioners, primary care nurses, and other mental health workers who treat people with BPD in healthcare settings such as, outpatients, inpatients, and community-based settings |
| Concept | Structural stigma specific to BPD and crisis care |
| Context | International peer-reviewed studies investigating educational interventions designed to modify health practitioners’ attitudes and practice in treating people with BPD in healthcare settings |
Articles included were: Evaluated educational interventions designed to modify health practitioners’ attitudes and practice in treating people with BPD in an outpatient, inpatient, and community-based setting Evaluated structural stigma as an outcome in healthcare settings Original research including peer-reviewed publications on quantitative, qualitative, mixed-methods, and review designs Written in English language only | Articles excluded were: Evaluated health practitioners’ treating people with other mental illnesses Not reporting outcomes specific to borderline personality disorder and structural stigma Not conducted in non-clinical settings such as, educational institutions Studies of low quality |
Data extraction of included studies on educational interventions for borderline personality disorder in healthcare
| Author, Year, Country | MMAT v.18/JBI Quality Rating* | Population Type | Setting | Aim/Purpose | Study design/follow up | Intervention/Mode of delivery | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clarke et al. 2015 [ | **** | Multi-disciplinary teams | Inpatient setting | The aim of this study was to assess whether training in neurobiological underpinnings of Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) could improve knowledge and attitude change within staff members working in a low secure inpatient setting | Within-subjects, quantitative questionnaire design / pre- and post- training and 2 month follow up | The Science of BPD | Attendance at the training session was associated with significant increases in theoretical knowledge, Perspective Taking and Locus of Origin scores. However, there were no changes observed in Empathic Concern scores. This research suggests that a relatively brief training session, that utilizes the neurobiological framework, can be effective in facilitating knowledge and attitudinal change for those working with BPD. |
| Commons Treloar et al. 2009 [ | *** | Registered health practitioners | Aus / NZ health services | To examine two theoretical frameworks (cognitive-behavioral and psychoanalytic), and compare changes in clinicians’ attitudes towards deliberate self-harm behaviors in BPD | Exploratory Randomized Controlled Trial/ pre- and post-training and 6-months follow up | Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Psychotherapy (both 45 min); Seminar discussions (45 min) | Compared with participants in the control group ( |
| Dickens et al. 2016 [ | JBI, Level 1.b/ Level 4* | Mental health nurses | To collate the current evidence about interventions that have been devised to improve the responses of mental health nurses towards people with BPD | Systematic Review | Various interventions/duration of training | Eight studies were included in this review, half of which were judged to be methodologically weak, and the remaining four studies judged to be of moderate quality. Only one study employed a control group. The largest effect sizes were found for changes related to cognitive attitudes including knowledge; smaller effect sizes were found in relation to changes in affective outcomes. Self-reported behavioral change in the form of increased use of components of Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) following training in this treatment was associated with moderate effect sizes. Mental health nurses hold the poorest attitudes to people with BPD. | |
| Dickens et al. 2019 [ | **** | Mental Health staff | Inpatient / community settings | To evaluate/ explore mental health nurses’ responses to, and experience of, an educational intervention to improve attitudes towards people with a diagnosis of BPD | Mixed methods/pre- and post- training surveys and 4-month follow up/Focus Groups | Positive about Borderline including, Part 1: The Science of BPD (3-hr); and Part 2: Wot R U Like? Training (3-hr)/ Presentation, activities, discussion | Quantitative evaluation revealed sustained changes consistent with expected attitudinal gains in relation to the perceived treatment characteristics of this group, the perception of their suicidal tendencies and negative attitudes. Qualitative findings revealed hostility towards the underpinning biosocial model and positive appreciation for the involvement of an expert by experience. Conclusions: Sustained benefits of an educational intervention for people working with people diagnosed with BPD in some but not all areas. The study provides evidence for incorporation of a biosocial model into staff training and the benefits of expert by experience co-production. Mental health nurses believe that more well-resourced services are the key to improving care. |
| Keuroghlian et al. 2006 [ | **** | Mental Health clinicians including, psychiatrists, psychologists, counselors, nurses, and internists/primary care doctors | Medical Centers/Hospitals | Aims: (1) assess the effectiveness of Good Psychiatric Management workshops at improving clinicians’ attitudes to BPD and, (2) assess if changes in attitudes relate to the years of clinical experience | Before and after design/ pre- and post-training follow-up | Good Psychiatric Management Workshop (1-day)/ Didactic teaching; videos; case vignettes | Participants reported decreased inclination to avoid patients with borderline, dislike of patients with borderline, belief that BPD prognosis is hopeless, and increased feeling of professional competence, belief that they can make a positive difference and that effective psychotherapies exist. Less clinical experience was related to an increased feeling of competence. Findings demonstrate Good Psychiatric Management potential for training clinicians to meet population-wide needs related to BPD. |
| Knaak et al. 2015 [ | *** | Health Practitioners including, social workers, psychiatrists, psychologists, counselors, nurses, students, director/managers | Health services | To identify whether a generalist or specialist approach is the better strategy for anti-stigma programming for disorders characterized by high levels of stigmatization; and to examine the extent an intervention led to change in perceptions towards people with BPD and mental illness. | Pre-post design/ pre- and post-training follow-up | BPD/ DBT Workshop (3-hr) | Although effectiveness cannot be conclusively demonstrated with the current research design, results are encouraging that the intervention was successful at improving healthcare provider attitudes and behavioral intentions towards persons with BPD. The results further suggest that anti-stigma interventions effective at combating stigma against a specific disorder may also have positive generalizable effects towards a broader set of mental illnesses. |
| Masland et al. 2018 [ | **** | Mental health clinicians, researchers, administrators | Medical Centre including outpatient, inpatient, residential, private practice. | To examine whether a 1-day training in Good Psychiatric Management can change clinician attitudes and beliefs and whether those changes persist over time | Repeated Measures Design/ pre- and post-training s and 6-month follow up | Good Psychiatric Management (1-day)/Lecture format; instructive case videos; case vignettes | Staff attitudes did not change immediately after training, but 6 months later had changed significantly. Findings indicate that brief training can foster enduring improvements in clinician attitudes and beliefs about BPD. |
| Pigot et al. 2019 [ | ***** | Mental health clinicians, managers | Public mental health services | To understand the facilitators and barriers to real world implementation of a stepped care approach to treating personality disorders | Qualitative study | A Stepped Care approach/ post-training implementation at 18-mth follow-up | Participants identified personal attitudes, knowledge and skills as important for successful implementation. Existing positive attitudes and beliefs about treating people with a personality disorder contributed to the emergence of clinical champions. Training facilitated positive attitudes by justifying the psychological approach. Management support was found to bi-directionally effect implementation. Findings suggests specific organizational and individual factors may increase timely and efficient implementation of interventions for people with BPD. |
| Warrender 2015 [ | ***** | Nurses | Acute mental health services | To capture staff perceptions of the impact of health. Mentalization-based therapy skills (MBT-S) training on their practice when working with people BPD in acute mental health | Qualitative/Focus groups | MBT-S Training (2-day)/ Didactic teaching; role play; DVD clips | MBT-S Training promoted empathy and humane responses to self-harm, impacted on participants ability to tolerate risk and changed some perceptions of BPD. Staff felt empowered and more confident to work with people with BPD. The positive implication for practice was the ease in which the approach was adopted and participants perception of MBT-S as an empowering skill set which also contributed to attitudinal change. |
Data extraction relevant to the review objectives and review question(s). *MMAT v.18 Quality rating: low = 1 to 2 stars; moderate = 3 stars; moderately high = 4 stars; high = 5 stars. *JBI Quality rating for level of evidence for effectiveness is level 1.b systematic review of RCTs and other study designs; and the level of meaningfulness is 4 - systematic reviews of expert opinion [51–53]
Fig. 1PRISMA flowchart of the selection of papers and studies for the integrative review
Summary of key study characteristics
| N | % | |
|---|---|---|
| Participants | 991 | 100 |
| Study methodologies | ||
| Quantitative studies | 7 | 56 |
| Qualitative studies | 2 | 22 |
| Mixed methods study | 1 | 11 |
| Systematic review | 1 | 11 |
| Healthcare setting | ||
| Mental health services | 5 | 45 |
| Emergency departments | 1 | 10 |
| Hospital and health services | 5 | 45 |
| Occupation | ||
| Medicine | 159 | 16 |
| Nursing | 431 | 44 |
| Allied Health | 369 | 37 |
| Education, | 1 | 0.1 |
| Administration | 3 | 0.3 |
| Director/Manager | 8 | 0.8 |
| Student | 9 | 0.9 |
| Other | 11 | 1.1 |
Fig. 2Findings on the key themes of the integrative review
Fig. 3A systems approach to responsive service provision for BPD