Archive for the tag: Personality

What is Borderline Personality Disorder?

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A quick summary about Borderline Personality Disorder, or BPD, one of the many personality trait-based DSM diagnoses. In this video I try to show some of the difficulties of living with BPD, as well as a bit about treatment of the condition.

Questions and corrections always welcome in the comments.

For those interested in the DSM classification, I’ve left out two diagnostic elements in this video – dissociation/paranoia, and suicidal/self harm behaviours.

Visit https://www.spectrumbpd.com.au/ for more information.

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What is Borderline Personality Disorder?

It’s estimated that one in a hundred people have borderline personality disorder, or BPD. In this video, we’ll talk about the challenges people with BPD face, the features that characterise the condition, and how people can recover from it.

People with BPD face issues such as
Feeling a desperate and urgent need to avoid being abandoned by other people – even if the abandonment is only imagined
Having intense and unstable relationships, repeatedly
Idealising people, then intensely disliking or devaluing them, in relatively short intervals
A chronic feeling of emptiness
Uncertainty of self – what psychiatrists call an ‘unstable self-image’
Repeatedly acting in impulsive and risky ways
Feeling rapid fluctuations in mood

To add to these challenges, BPD is currently under-recognised, and the availability of specific services is limited. The reason may include the social stigma of mental health conditions, or the challenges that health professionals face in treating BPD.

Think of these factors, then consider how that might affect a relationship between a health professional and a person with BPD.

If you know or have known someone with BPD, you might struggle to find empathy towards them. You might have good reason – they might have hurt you. It’s important not to blame the person in such situations. It’s not their fault, after all. So what is the cause of BPD? Well, it isn’t fully understood. Currently, a combination of biological factors and early-life experiences, such as trauma, is thought to contribute to the development of BPD.

Diagnosis
The psychiatrist’s manual of diagnosis – the DSM – encourages diagnosis of personality disorders based on the following:
An enduring pattern of inner experience and behaviour that deviates markedly from the expectations of the individual’s culture, manifested in two (or more) of the following areas:
– cognition (i.e. ways of perceiving and interpreting self, other people, and events)
– affectivity (i.e. the range, intensity, lability, and appropriateness of emotional response)
– interpersonal functioning
– impulse control.
The pattern must be inflexible and pervasive, lead to clinically significant distress or impairment, be of long duration, with onset that can be traced back at least to adolescence or early adulthood.
Meanwhile, the possibility that these symptoms are part of another mental disorder, or caused by substance abuse must be ruled out.

In terms of BPD specifically, these elements will be characterised by a pervasive pattern of instability of interpersonal relationships, self-image and affects, and marked impulsivity.

It’s important to remember that diagnosis of BPD can be a double-edged sword. On the one hand, it can help people to identify their worrying behaviour, and work to improve their lives. On the other hand, it can expose the person to discrimination. A 2010 Australian Senate Committee on Mental health stated that “an end to marginalisation of the disorder within the community and the mental health sector, is urgently needed.”

Management
Many people with BPD will have the following treatment goals:
To regulate their emotional world
To find a sense of purpose in life
Development and maintenance of strong relationships

The best treatment results have been shown with Dialectical Behavioural Therapy. Dialectical means ‘concerned with opposing forces’, which here are “acceptance” and “change”. It involves working with a therapist to both accept the person as they are, and to appreciate the importance of change in recovery.

Given that a person with BPD experiences significant issues regarding real or perceived abandonment, and may also experience intense and uncontrollable mood swings – the challenge is considerable for treating health professionals, particularly if they are untrained in BPD. It is the responsibility of the health professional, however, to stay calm in difficult situations, as the maintenance of a strong therapeutic relationship is integral to positive treatment of BPD.

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Dr. Elba Iglesias, MD, Medical Director of Adolescent Medicine provides us five signs your child may have an eating disorder.

What It's Like to Live With Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD)

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Claim one week of free access to the MedCircle library to access hundreds of exclusive videos like this one: https://bit.ly/2XCXyoB

Here’s what it’s like to live with borderline personality disorder (BPD) according to Sammy Grimm.

Nearly 40% of people with borderline personality disorder have previously been misdiagnosed with bipolar disorder. Sammy Grimm is one of those people. Sammy is a resilient young woman who has seen the current broken mental health care model first hand – falling prey to TWO different misdiagnoses. She has since taken a very proactive role in her own mental health care & has fought for the right diagnosis of borderline personality disorder (BPD.) This is her story – what it’s like to live with borderline personality disorder (also known as EUPD.)

Mental health is complicated & overwhelming. MedCircle makes it easier by providing in-depth educational video series and actionable advice through stories from real-life patients.

#BPD #MentalHealth #MedCircle

How to Spot the 4 Types of Borderline Personality Disorder

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How to Spot the 4 Types of Borderline Personality Disorder

Claim one week of free access to the MedCircle library to access hundreds of exclusive videos featuring Dr. Ramani: https://bit.ly/3gOnUgK

Did you know there are 4 types of borderline personality disorder (BPD)? Most people always assume every diagnosis of borderline personality disorder looks like one specific type.

In this video, MedCircle host Kyle Kittleson and clinical psychologist / BPD expert Dr. Ramani Durvasula discuss how to spot…

High Functioning Internalizing AKA Quiet borderline personality disorder
Angry Externalizing AKA Impulsive BPD
Histrionic AKA Petulant BPD
Depressive internalizing AKA Self Destructive borderline personality disorder

They also discuss whether the types of treatment differ for each type of BPD.

To learn more about what type of provider to seek out with personality disorder, join our LIVE panel featuring multiple MedCircle psychiatrists and psychiatrists. You can register here with a Free Trial to MedCircle –
Step 1: Start your free trial at https://bit.ly/2ZAAsyx
Step 2: Claim your guaranteed seat to the Live Panel: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/1716123012246/WN_RELCq652SZG5EPGQX4oVMA

Watch our video on the 9 Traits of BPD HERE: https://youtu.be/to5qRLRSS7g

Watch more mental health & psychology videos on every personality disorder and more at MedCircle:

Antisocial personality disorder (ASPD)
Histrionic personality disorder (HPD)
Schizoid personality disorder (SPD)
Avoidant personality disorder (AVPD)
Paranoid personality disorder (PPD)
Schizotypal personality disorder (STPD)
Narcissistic personality disorder (NPD)
Obsessive compulsive personality disorder (OCPD)
Borderline personality disorder (BPD)
Dependent personality disorder (DPD)
Related: dissociative identity disorder (DID) formerly known as multiple personality disorder

#BorderlinePersonalityDisorder #MentalHealth #MedCircle
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Withdrawal is when you feel awful and the only way to feel better is to use again. Learn what the signs and symptoms of substance use disorder are and treatment options.

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Embracing Borderline Personality Disorder – Dr Keith Gaynor

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Dr. Gaynor presents a thoroughly engaging lecture about Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD). The current working definition of BPD is ‘a pervasive disorder of the emotion regulation system’. Dr. Gaynor outlines how BPD presents differently to ‘normal’ depression and bipolar depression. He talks about common behaviours (addictions, self-harm, acting out) that some people engage in when attempting to regulate the emotional dysregulation caused by BPD. He addresses the reasons that BPD symptoms may develop for an individual and refers to three evidence based treatments: Dialectic Behavioural Therapy (DBT), Mentalisation and Schema Therapy. Dr. Gaynor also stresses the important contribution made by Margaret Linehan, who is considered the leading expert internationally in the field of BPD.
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"Back From the Edge" – Borderline Personality Disorder – Call us: 888-694-2273

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“Back From the Edge” offers guidance on treating Borderline Personality Disorder. The video was created by the Borderline Personality Disorder Resource Center at NewYork-Presbyterian. Learn more at http://www.nyp.org/bpdresourcecenter | Contact us: 888-694-2273

Also, learn about “Remnants of a Life on Paper,” a book that tells the story of a young woman suffering with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) and watch a video featuring NewYork-Presbyterian psychiatrist, Frank E. Yeomans, M.D., by visiting http://remnantsofalife.com.

Lastly, you can watch this video with Spanish subtitles here: http://youtu.be/_34Yd6m50dk