Therapy and Treatment of Personality Disorders
First published here: "Personality Disorders (Suite101)"
"Personality Disorders Revisited" (450 pages e-book) - click HERE to purchase!
By:
Dr. Sam
Vaknin

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I. Introduction
The dogmatic schools of psychotherapy (such as
psychoanalysis, psychodynamic therapies, and behaviorism) more or less failed in
ameliorating, let alone curing or healing personality disorders. Disillusioned,
most therapists now adhere to one or more of three modern methods: Brief
Therapies, the Common Factors approach, and Eclectic techniques.
Conventionally, brief therapies, as their name implies, are short-term but
effective. They involve a few rigidly structured sessions, directed by the
therapist. The patient is expected to be active and responsive. Both parties
sign a therapeutic contract (or alliance) in which they define the goals of the
therapy and, consequently, its themes. As opposed to earlier treatment
modalities, brief therapies actually encourage anxiety because they believe that
it has a catalytic and cathartic effect on the patient.
Supporters of the Common Factors approach point out that all psychotherapies are
more or less equally efficient (or rather similarly inefficient) in treating
personality disorders. As Garfield noted in 1957, the first step perforce
involves a voluntary action: the subject seeks help because he or she
experiences intolerable discomfort, ego-dystony, dysphoria, and dysfunction.
This act is the first and indispensable factor associated with all therapeutic
encounters, regardless of their origins.
(continued below)
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Another common factor is the fact that all talk therapies
revolve around disclosure and confidences. The patient confesses his or her
problems, burdens, worries, anxieties, fears, wishes, intrusive thoughts,
compulsions, difficulties, failures, delusions, and, generally invites the
therapist into the recesses of his or her innermost mental landscape.
The therapist leverages this torrent of data and elaborates on it through a
series of attentive comments and probing, thought-provoking queries and
insights. This pattern of give and take should, in time, yield a relationship
between patient and healer, based on mutual trust and respect. To many patients
this may well be the first healthy relationship they experience and a model to
build on in the future.
Good therapy empowers the client and enhances her ability to properly gauge
reality (her reality test). It amount to a comprehensive rethink of oneself and
one's life. With perspective comes a stable sense of self-worth, well-being, and
competence (self-confidence).
In 1961, a scholar, Frank made a list of the important elements in all
psychotherapies regardless of their intellectual provenance and technique:
1. The therapist should be trustworthy, competent, and caring.
2. The therapist should facilitate behavioral modification in the patient by
fostering hope and "stimulating emotional arousal" (as Millon puts it). In other
words, the patient should be re-introduced to his repressed or stunted emotions
and thereby undergo a "corrective emotional experience."
3. The therapist should help the patient develop insight about herself - a new
way of looking at herself and her world and of understanding who she is.
4. All therapies must weather the inevitable crises and demoralization that
accompany the process of confronting oneself and one's shortcomings. Loss of
self-esteem and devastating feelings of inadequacy, helplessness, hopelessness,
alienation, and even despair are an integral, productive, and important part of
the sessions if handled properly and competently.
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II. Eclectic Psychotherapy
The early days of the emerging discipline of psychology were
inevitably rigidly dogmatic. Clinicians belonged to well-demarcated schools and
practiced in strict accordance with canons of writings by "masters" such as
Freud, or Jung, or Adler, or Skinner. Psychology was less a science than an
ideology or an art form. Freud's work, for instance, though incredibly
insightful, is closer to literature and cultural studies than to proper,
evidence-based, medicine.
Not so nowadays. Mental health practitioners freely borrow tools and techniques
from a myriad therapeutic systems. They refuse to be labeled and boxed in. The
only principle that guides modern therapists is "what works" - the effectiveness
of treatment modalities, not their intellectual provenance. The therapy, insists
these eclecticists, should be tailored to the patient, not the other way around.
This sounds self-evident but as Lazarus pointed out in a series of articles in
the 1970s, it is nothing less than revolutionary. The therapist today is free to
match techniques from any number of schools to presenting problems without
committing himself to the theoretical apparatus (or baggage) that is associated
with them. She can use psychoanalysis or behavioral methods while rejecting
Freud's ideas and Skinner's theory, for instance.
Lazarus proposed that the appraisal of the efficacy and applicability of a
treatment modality should be based on six data: BASIC IB (Behavior, Affect,
Sensation, Imagery, Cognition, Interpersonal Relationships, and Biology). What
are the patient's dysfunctional behavior patterns? How is her sensorium? In what
ways does her imagery connect with her problems, presenting symptoms, and signs?
Does he suffer from cognitive deficits and distortions? What is the extent and
quality of the patient's interpersonal relationships? Does the subject suffer
from any medical, genetic, or neurological problems that may affect his or her
conduct and functioning?
Once the answers to these questions are collated, the therapist
should judge which treatment options are likely to yield the fastest and most
durable outcomes, based on empirical data. As Beutler and Chalkin noted in a
groundbreaking article in 1990, therapists no longer harbor delusions of
omnipotence. Whether a course of therapy succeeds or not depends on numerous
factors such as the therapist's and the patient's personalities and past
histories and the interactions between the various techniques used.
So what's the use of theorizing in psychology? Why not simply revert to trial
and error and see what works?
Beutler, a staunch supporter and promoter of eclecticism, provides the answer:
Psychological theories of personality allow us to be more selective. They
provide guidelines as to which treatment modalities we should consider in any
given situation and for any given patient. Without these intellectual edifices
we would be lost in a sea of "everything goes". In other words, psychological
theories are organizing principles. They provide the practitioner with selection
rules and criteria that he or she would do well to apply if they don't want to
drown in a sea of ill-delineated treatment options.
Learn more about psychoanalysis - click HERE!
Read more about treatment modalities and therapies - click HERE!
Many additional Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) about Personality Disorders - click HERE!
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