Borderline
Borderline
Borderline
DISORDER
A Clinical Guide
SECOND EDITION
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BORDERLINE PERSONALITY
DISORDER
A Clinical Guide
SECOND EDITION
With
Paul S. Links, M.D., F.R.C.P.C.
Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Toronto, Canada
Washington, DC
London, England
Note: The authors have worked to ensure that all information in this
book is accurate at the time of publication and consistent with general
psychiatric and medical standards, and that information concerning
drug dosages, schedules, and routes of administration is accurate at the
time of publication and consistent with standards set by the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration and the general medical community. As medi-
cal research and practice continue to advance, however, therapeutic stan-
dards may change. Moreover, specific situations may require a specific
therapeutic response not included in this book. For these reasons and
because human and mechanical errors sometimes occur, we recommend
that readers follow the advice of physicians directly involved in their care
or the care of a member of their family.
Books published by American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc., represent the
views and opinions of the individual authors and do not necessarily rep-
resent the policies and opinions of APPI or the American Psychiatric As-
sociation.
The authors of this book, John G. Gunderson, M.D., and Paul S. Links,
M.D., F.R.C.P.C., have no competing interests to disclose.
Copyright © 2008 American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
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Second Edition
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Gunderson, John G., 1942–
Borderline personality disorder : a clinical guide / John G. Gunderson
with Paul S. Links. — 2nd ed.
p. ; cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-1-58562-335-8 (alk. paper)
1. Borderline personality disorder. I. Links, Paul S. II. Title.
[DNLM: 1. Borderline Personality Disorder. WM 190 G975ba 2008]
RC569.5.B67G863 2008
616.85'852—dc22
2008005061
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A CIP record is available from the British Library.
CONTENTS
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xiii
Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 337
List of Sidebars
1–1: Where Were the Borderline Patients Before
the Diagnosis? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
1–2: The Subjective Experience of Being Borderline . . . . . 13
1–3: Borderline Personality as an Iatrogenic Disorder . . . . 15
1–4: British Developmentalists: From Winnicott to
Bowlby to Fonagy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
1–5: “Wisdom Is Never Calling a Patient Borderline” . . . . 23
1–6: Cutting: Social Contagion or
Psychopathology? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
2–1: Was Vincent van Gogh Borderline? . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
2–2: Is Martha Stewart Borderline? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
3–1: Should Consumers Receive Progress Reports? . . . . . 74
3–2: Myths About Alliance With Borderline Patients . . . . . 83
4–1: Guidelines to Avoid Liability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93
4–2: Is Contracting for Safety Safe? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99
5–1: Can Long-Term Hospitalization Be Desirable
for BPD? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115
5–2: How Psychotherapeutic Technique Relates to
Level of Care . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121
5–3: Vocational Counseling: Should a Borderline
Patient Return to School, Pursue a Career, or
Become a Caregiver? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123
5–4: Empirical Support for a Specialized
“Mentalization-Based” Day Hospital . . . . . . . . . . . . 128
6–1: Listening to Prozac: Can Selective
Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors Cure BPD? . . . . . . . . 141
6–2: Liability Hazards of Split Treatment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 147
8–1: “You Can’t Talk to My Parents” . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 182
8–2: Families of Married Borderline Patients . . . . . . . . . . 184
8–3: Finessing the Guilt Issue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 186
8–4: “Good Cop/Bad Cop”: A Parental Problem . . . . . 191
8–5: Makes Sense, But Does it Work?
Preliminary Findings of the Psychoeducational
Multiple-Family Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 195
9–1: Research on Interpersonal Group Therapy
With BPD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 215
10–1: Quality Assurance: Should Therapists Be
Credentialed to Treat BPD? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 240
10–2: Listening to Kernberg or Linehan: Can Charisma
Cure BPD? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 242
11–1: Schema-Focused Therapy: Does It Work? . . . . . . . 269
12–1: Kernberg Versus Kohut/Adler: The Debate of
the 1970s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 280
12–2: Kernberg Versus Linehan: The Debate of
the 1990s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 286
12–3: Transitional Objects: From Concept to
Phenomenon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 298
12–4: Is Regression Therapeutic? The Two Margarets . . . . 302
13–1: Were a Famous Borderline Person
to Go Public… . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 323
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
xi
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INTRODUCTION
xiii
xiv ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Reflecting the fact that medications have quietly become the single
most widely and uniformly used treatment for BPD, two chapters (6 and
7) are devoted to psychopharmacology. Chapter 6 offers an extensive ac-
count of the seemingly irrational in vivo complexities surrounding pre-
scribing medications and evaluating their effectiveness. In contrast,
Chapter 7 offers a rational algorithm to guide selection of medications
that should usefully inform prescribing physicians.
Chapter 8 encourages clinicians to involve families far more than has
been customary. I describe how clinicians can use consumer-friendly
psychoeducational interventions. Note that many interventions, albeit
brief and not called therapies, may be very valuable. Furthermore, use of
traditional dynamic family therapies is reserved for only selected cases
and then only in a late stage of treatment. For most families, the primary
treatments are parental coaching and assisted problem solving. Prelimi-
nary data that show the value of such coaching and problem solving are
offered.
Chapter 9 underscores the role that interpersonal groups should play
in the first year or so of most borderline patients’ treatment. This type of
treatment is readily exportable and nicely complements the functions
served by individual therapies or psychopharmacology by addressing the
interpersonal impairment that is central to most borderline patients’ dis-
order. The available empirical evidence underscores the need for more
use of and more research on interpersonal groups.
In Chapter 10, I argue that initiating individual psychotherapy should
be done selectively, taking into account the motivation, the aptitude, and
the social supports required of both patients and therapists. Otherwise
skilled cognitive-behavioral or dynamically oriented therapists still need
special training and experience, and perhaps special personality traits, to
do such therapies well. Chapter 10 also outlines some of the general over-
lapping characteristics of all effective psychotherapies.
Although cognitive-behavioral principles have always been needed
for adequate treatment of BPD, Chapter 11 recognizes that specific types
of cognitive-behavioral treatments have now become the cornerstone for
much modern theory and practice. Indeed, dialectical behavior therapy
(DBT) has rapidly become the most BPD-specific and empirically sub-
stantiated treatment for BPD. Unquestionably, DBT was the major ad-
vance in therapeutics of the 1990s. Chapter 11 tries both to acquaint the
uninitiated with DBT and to place it in some perspective. Other notable
developments cited in Chapter 11 include the recent addition of a prom-
ising second empirically validated cognitive-behavioral treatment,
schema-focused psychotherapy, and evidence for the potential for short-
term cognitive-behavioral therapies to be effective for discrete goals.
xvi ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
1
2 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Use of the term borderline for atypical, clinically troubling cases stag-
gered along in the periphery of psychiatric thinking without notable
progress until developments in the late 1960s. At this point, the conflu-
ence of three independent investigations forced the questions about a
borderline consciousness.
The first of these investigations came from Otto Kernberg (1967).
Even as a relatively young man, Kernberg authoritatively added to the psy-
choanalytic perspective of the borderline construct. He defined borderline
personality organization as one of three forms of personality organization, to
be differentiated from sicker patients, who had psychotic personality organi-
zation, and healthier patients, who had neurotic personality organization (Fig-
ure 1–2). Borderline personality organization was characterized by failed
or weak identity formation, primitive defenses (namely, splitting and pro-
jective identification), and reality testing that transiently lapsed under
stress. Kernberg’s scheme was a conceptual advance within the psycho-
analytic community by virtue of integrating object relations with ego
psychology and the instincts and by virtue of giving a rationale and orga-
nization to a basic classification system. However, the effect of his scheme
within the larger mental health community derived more from the opti-
mistic therapeutic mandates that he gained from his way of understand-
ing these patients than from the concept itself (see Kernberg 1968, 1975).
The second seminal contribution was provided by Roy Grinker et al.
(1968), a senior and respected statesman within American psychiatry. Ar-
mored with a brief personal analysis by Freud himself, Grinker had be-
come chairman of psychiatry at The University of Chicago and editor of
the Archives of General Psychiatry. As one of the early champions of the
need for empirical research, and having already made major contribu-
tions to studies of depression and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD),
Grinker undertook the first empirical study of borderline patients. With
4 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
al. 1983), the effect of this work was to stimulate further research interest
in the borderline diagnosis and to move the theorizing about such pa-
tients into the realms of genetic transmission and biological therapies.
In the historical context of these three independent investigations—
analytic, descriptive, and genetic—my own contribution began. At Massa-
chusetts Mental Health Center in 1969, I conducted a small study char-
acterizing the diagnostically “wastebasket” patients who most distressed
my group of beginning residents. My interest subsequently intensified
while at the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), where I became
aware of the three investigations—and the three primary investigators—
cited earlier. This interest prompted a collaboration with Carpenter and
Strauss to disentangle borderline patients from those with a diagnosis of
schizophrenia (Gunderson et al. 1975); more important, it prompted the
review and synthesis of all the relevant literature in collaboration with
Singer. That review, “Defining Borderline Patients: An Overview” (Gun-
derson and Singer 1975), received such surprising acclaim when it was
published in 1975 that my involvement greatly intensified. What followed
was the development of a structured interview (Diagnostic Interview for
Borderline Patients [DIB]; Gunderson et al. 1981), with which the diag-
nosis could be made reliably and with which we were able to identify a set
of discriminating characteristics (Gunderson and Kolb 1978). Spitzer, as
overseer of the development of DSM-III, used these characteristics in a
survey of clinical practices, and, with the addition of the criterion about
identity diffusion that derived from Kernberg, the characteristics were all
validated as being the most discriminating in clinical practice (Spitzer et
al. 1979). The disorder defined by these criteria narrowed the syndrome
from the definitions offered by Kernberg and Grinker (see Figure 1–2).
In 1980, the BPD diagnosis, amid considerable controversy, entered the
official classification system, DSM-III.
It was official, but what was it?
sexual abuse and other trauma (Gunderson and Sabo 1993; Zanarini
et al. 1997)
• Confirming that both modalities and techniques specific to this diag-
nosis have preferential benefits
Epidemiology
The epidemiological data about BPD remains methodologically weak.
Thus, all the figures reported in Table 1–1 should be considered best
estimates. Of particular interest, but particularly speculative, are the au-
thors’ estimates about age at onset, which are based on retrospective ac-
counts. Almost certainly, prodromal signs of this disorder (e.g., cutting)
are identifiable for most of the patients who develop it, but we know little
about this. Similarly, for prevalence, the critical studies in the general
population have not been done. Still, it seems clear that it will probably
be about 1%.
Although the epidemiological data are not strong, borderline pa-
tients constitute a high proportion (approximately 20%) of psychiatric
inpatients and outpatients. They are also high consumers of emergency
department services, crisis lines, and psychiatric consultative liaisons to
other medical services (Ellison et al. 1989; J. Reich et al. 1989).
Patients with BPD represent 9%–33% of all suicides (Kullgren et al.
1986; Runeson and Beskow 1991). Among patients 15 years or older pre-
senting to the hospital with suicide attempts, 41% were given the diagno-
sis of BPD, and 56% of the female attempters had BPD (Persson et al.
1999). At least 50% of chronically suicidal patients with four or more vis-
its in a year to a psychiatric emergency department are patients with BPD
(Bongar et al. 1990). Such patients accounted for more than 12% of all
psychiatric emergency department visits during the year studied. De-
pending on the study, the lifetime risk of suicide among patients with
BPD is between 3% and 10% (Paris and Zweig-Frank 2001).
et al. 2001.
cDahl 1986; Loranger 1990; Widiger and Weissman 1991.
dKoenigsberg et al. 1985; Widiger and Weissman 1991.
Table 1–2 shows the nine criteria in DSM-IV for diagnosing BPD, as
well as changes in the criteria from DSM-III-R (American Psychiatric As-
sociation 1987) to DSM-IV. The criteria in the table are organized accord-
ing to their association as factors and in the approximate order of their
diagnostic value (differing from their order in DSM-IV), and only signif-
icant changes are shown. The text that follows is an amplification of each
criterion to emphasize its clinical meaning.
Disturbed Relationships
note].
bOr depersonalization, derealization, or hypnagogic illusions [author’s note].
Affective Instability
4. Affective instability. This criterion developed out of the work of early
clinical observers (e.g., Grinker et al. 1968; Zetzel 1971) who were im-
pressed by the intensity, volatility, and range of the borderline pa-
tient’s affects. As described earlier, such observations prompted D.
Klein (1975, 1977), Stone (1979, 1980), and Akiskal (1981, 1985) to
propose that the basic psychopathology of borderline individuals in-
volved the same problems of affective regularity found in people with
mood disorders—originally depression, now bipolar II disorder.
14 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Impulsivity
6. Impulsivity. This criterion evolved out of the early literature describ-
ing the problems within psychotherapies of acting out as a resistance
to, or flight from, feelings and conflicts. Empirical studies then found
that the impulsivity of borderline individuals is to some extent differ-
ent from that found in manic/hypomanic or antisocial patients by
virtue of its being self-damaging. Thus, the person with BPD who is a
substance abuser would be likely to relapse if angry at his or her Al-
coholics Anonymous sponsor or because of that sponsor’s absence or
unavailability. This one criterion, impulsivity, provides a way of incor-
porating as symptoms what are otherwise considered distinct disor-
ders (e.g., bulimia and substance abuse). It is not uncommon for
borderline patients to substitute one impulse pattern for another—
for example, exchanging cutting for purging for abusing drugs. As
noted elsewhere, the impulsivity of borderline patients has been con-
sidered a basic temperamental disposition and has linked BPD to an-
tisocial personality disorder (see Chapter 2).
7. Suicidal or self-mutilating behaviors. Recurrent suicidal attempts, ges-
tures, or threats or self-mutilating behaviors are the borderline pa-
The Borderline Diagnosis ❘ 15
when fear of fusion is equal to or greater than fears of aloneness, the pa-
tient is more likely to have predominantly schizoid or narcissistic psycho-
pathology. The formulation offered here is consistent with Fairbairn’s
(1963) thesis (and subsequently Bowlby’s) that humans have an innate
drive for attachment; they are biologically object seeking.
It is only by longitudinal and interpersonally focused observations
that these changing phenomena become evidence of a single underlying
pathological process. Descriptive psychiatry has been too cross-sectional
and too distant to see the interpersonal patterns. Psychoanalytic psychia-
try has been too single-case-based and interpersonally intimate to identify
the phenomenological pattern.
tal health facilities than in nonstate facilities (Oldham and Skodol 1991).
I believe this conclusion is true but that the underuse may have even
more to do with a strong bias toward diagnosing and offering treatments
for only what managed care payers and biological psychiatrists deem
treatable.
I want to cut. I want to see pain, for it is the most physical thing to show.
You can not show pain inside. I want to cut, cut, show, show. Get it out.
What out? Just pain.
With respect to the second question about what caused the person to
have BPD, the causes are still poorly understood, so the response needs to
convey this complexity:
The cause of BPD is not fully understood, but we know it involves multiple
factors. Like all other major psychiatric disorders, BPD arises when an in-
dividual with a genetic predisposition is exposed to environmental stress-
ors. Although the genetic predisposition is still being researched, we
believe that this involves three personality dimensions, each of which has
multiple genes. These dimensions, called phenotypes, involve affective
(emotional) instability, impulsivity, and interpersonal (rejection) hyper-
sensitivity. The environmental stressors that lead to the diagnosis are
highly variable from one individual to another; however, for many indi-
viduals, histories of neglect or trauma during childhood are highly rele-
vant. Research is beginning to tie the three personality dimensions or
phenotypes to neurobiological pathways. Neuroimaging studies suggest
that the emotional gateway within the brain, the amygdala, is overly ac-
tive, whereas the normal inhibitory system within the brain, the prefron-
tal cortex, is hypoactive. Although much more research needs to be done,
no one cause is adequate to explain the diagnosis of BPD.
Summary
That patients fulfill criteria for the borderline syndrome is well estab-
lished, and the use of the diagnosis has become more uniform and uni-
versal. The meaning of the diagnosis is still undergoing revision as greater
specificity is added to our understanding of the etiology and pathogenesis
of this disorder. A basic thesis of this book is that the diagnosis already car-
ries great specificity in terms of treatment but that a great deal of exper-
tise is required to provide such treatment well, whereas uninformed
treatment is very easy to do harmfully. With the emergence of this diagno-
sis as a valid and widely recognized entity, it is important that clinicians be-
gin using the diagnosis openly with patients and families. A way to do so
has been presented here. This chapter’s larger message is that it is highly
useful to be explicit and unapologetic in making this diagnosis and that
to do otherwise is often a product of our countertransference feelings
about such patients.
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The Borderline Diagnosis ❘ 35
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
Overlaps, Subtleties, and Treatment
Implications
Overall Function
All major psychiatric diagnoses represent interactions between baseline
genetic diathesis and adverse environmental stress. Borderline personal-
ity disorder (BPD) exemplifies this diagnosis; and, given its fuzzy borders
with many other psychiatric diagnoses, the importance of making this
particular diagnosis can easily be underestimated. However, failure to
recognize the diagnosis will always create clinical problems.
Identifying BPD is important for several specific reasons.
First, the diagnosis anchors the patient’s and the clinician’s expec-
tations about course. Even when priority may be given to symptoms, be-
haviors, or situational crises, the perspective of a long-term seriously
handicapped person sets realistic boundaries to what can be expected.
BPD patients almost always present with depression, eating disorders, or
substance abuse, but it is only when the BPD diagnosis is identified that
realistic prognostications can occur.
Second, the borderline diagnosis establishes a basis for developing a
treatment alliance by offering patients a developmental and therapeutic
context that they will experience as meaningful and appropriate. As de-
scribed in this chapter, this alliance often develops from the initial reas-
surance that borderline patients feel when they learn that their problems
are shared by others and that their clinicians have a body of relevant
knowledge to draw from.
Third, the diagnosis prepares clinicians for what lies ahead—including
the option of referring the patient to those who may be better able to pro-
37
38 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
vide what is needed. Most specifically, the diagnosis helps therapists focus
on the characteristic defensive adaptations that these patients have made
(e.g., regressing, idealizing, blaming) lest therapists unwittingly enact the
roles that these patients commonly project (i.e., caregiver, controller, or
abuser). Indeed, it is because of such countertransference enactments that
astute clinicians began to appreciate that a particular type of personality
psychopathology that lay behind the fluctuating phenomenology could
help explain why clinicians had these problems. Fear of aloneness, for ex-
ample, is a stable underlying trait that gives coherence to the descriptive
characteristics of BPD (see Chapter 1) and conveys added meaning in
terms of both etiology and treatment. Such a characteristic helps clinicians
discriminate BPD from posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD; Gunderson
and Sabo 1993), narcissistic personality disorder (Plakun 1987; Ronning-
stam and Gunderson 1991), and depressive disorders (Westen et al. 1992).
❘
order; STPD= schizotypal personality disorder.
39
40 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Depression 50 15
Dysthymia 70 10
Bipolar II disorder 11 16
Bipolar I disorder 9 11
Eating disorder 25 No estimate
Bulimia 20 20
Anorexia 5 20
Obesity 5 10
Posttraumatic stress disorder 30 8
Substance abuse 35 10
Alcohol abuse only 25 5
Somatization 5 10
Narcissistic personality disorder 25 ~15
Antisocial personality disorder 25 ~25
Source. Estimates based on the following review articles: Dolan et al. 2001; Fyer
et al. 1988; Gunderson and Sabo 1993; Gunderson et al. 1991, 1999; Herzog et al.
1992; Hudziak et al. 1996; McGlashan et al. 2000; Paris et al. 2007; Stern et al.
1993; Tyrer et al. 1997; Zanarini et al. 1998a, 1998b.
tal. The clinician may only then learn, for example, that the “depressed”
patient had held her husband hostage by her dysfunction for several
months—ever since he had begun amicable discussions with her es-
tranged mother. The borderline diagnosis is primary in this instance.
Having said this, clinicians must not assume that any depressed patient
who self-harms is borderline.
Vignette
A patient in whom BPD was diagnosed on the basis of self-mutilative be-
haviors was referred for psychotherapy, where it became clear that she was
chronically isolated and had a developmental history marked by gloomy,
introverted parents and adherence to rigid religious values. She reported,
“I did not know I’d been depressed much of my life. I thought it was nor-
mal, just the way life is.” Her acts of cutting were the outgrowth of long-
standing moral preoccupations and offered her temporary relief from
them. In this patient, a depressive diagnosis was primary.
Vignette
A 34-year-old man who had undergone a female-to-male sex change op-
eration was flirtatious and had many affairs with members of both sexes.
After being hospitalized for suicidal impulses, he quickly became the “life
of the unit” and wondered aloud why his therapist would have thought he
was suicidal. When the patient was confronted with the facts that his re-
cent vocational and relational failures were doubtless related to these im-
pulses, he angrily stood up and declared, “How dare you talk to me like
that. You have no right to call me a ‘loser’! Do you want me to kill myself?”
He then promptly filed a formal complaint about his treatment.
The subtleties that differentiated this patient’s diagnosis were the in-
discriminate thrill-seeking or attention-seeking aspects of his behavior,
his confidence that authorities would help him punish the transgressors
(the confrontational staff), and the patient’s interest in keeping all rela-
tionships transient (as opposed to exclusive and binding). Particularly
important, in my experience, was the glibness of his feelings—it was dif-
ficult to take them seriously or to empathize with them. These character-
istics tilted the diagnostic balance toward bipolar II.
Vignette
A 28-year-old female litigation lawyer was referred for psychiatric consul-
tation after assaulting her boyfriend for having resumed drinking and
having lied to her about it. She had recently had an abortion with his en-
Differential Diagnosis ❘ 45
Vignette
A 44-year-old woman presented with flashbacks that disrupted her sleep
and concentration. Her childhood included eight hospitalizations be-
tween ages 13 and 18 for treatment of a congenital disease. Twenty-six
years later, she could still access the feeling of being “helpless and alone.”
In response, she would become agitated, with bursts of accusatory, offen-
sive anger toward her husband and children, which she would then
deeply regret as unfair. This remorse then prompted self-destructive or
suicidal impulses.
Vignette
A 34-year-old unmarried woman sought psychotherapy because she
“needs support.” She related this to a series of recent events.
She loved her job but, after becoming convinced that she was under-
paid, demanded more pay from her employer. She consequently lost her
job. She also had a fight with her landlord, insisting on her rights. This too
resulted in her being kicked out. In both instances, she perceived injustices
in the situations correctly, but she experienced the injustice too personally,
and her anger was disproportionate. Depressed about the consequences of
her fights and about the prospects of having no husband and no children,
she moved back to live with her mother and with her 40-year-old brother.
This brother had sexually abused her when she was between ages 6 and 10.
Her mother knew but had coped by alternating between helplessness and
denial.
The patient presented as very sensitive, wary, and vigilant to rejection
and criticism, with a defensive response to interpretations. She acknowl-
edged fears of intimacy and attachments. Her defensiveness made explor-
atory therapy unlikely. Even when a supportive therapist attempted to
work with her, she resisted getting attached.
This patient might have been given a BPD diagnosis by virtue of her an-
ger and need for support, but in my opinion, she would better be identified
as having complex PTSD, as proposed by Herman (1992). The bleakness of
her interpersonal life and her resistance to any attachment set the effects of
trauma apart from what is seen in BPD. Although the PTSD diagnosis is
sometimes overused by clinicians sympathetic to victims, its clinical signif-
icance often means that an intensive, exploratory, or close therapeutic re-
lationship will not be as possible as it is with patients having BPD.
Vignette
A 24-year-old woman with diagnoses of BPD and polysubstance abuse was
transferred to a hospital after being kicked out of her third substance
52 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
abuse program. In each case, she had violated every restriction by resum-
ing her pain-drug habit. While failing several placements in residential
programs, she became attached to a therapist, and gradually a new pre-
cipitant for her substance abuse relapse became apparent: relapse oc-
curred when her mother (although geographically distant from the
patient) traveled to see the patient’s brother or was visited by him. At this
point, the psychodynamic BPD issues took precedence over the substance
abuse issues in the therapist’s mind. Concretely, this idea surfaced when,
in response to the patient’s expressed wish to relocate home, her sub-
stance abuse counselor said, “When you have remained sober for 3
months,” and the therapist reframed the criterion as “When you can man-
age visits between your mother and brother without relapsing.”
consciously believes that medical care can relieve the symptoms. Border-
line patients may use physical complaints in either way (Nadelson 1985).
Although patients with Cluster C personality disorders are even more
likely to have somatoform disorders than are patients with BPD (Fink
1995; Stern et al. 1993), the risks associated with having BPD make it par-
ticularly important for medical services staff to be aware of this disorder.
Some borderline patients may wish to be injured (i.e., they may con-
sciously or unconsciously seek mistreatment), and then liability issues
can haunt unsuspecting doctors. Indeed, somatoform patients exemplify
why making the borderline diagnosis can be of critical importance.
Knowing about BPD in a somatizing patient increases doctors’ awareness
about potential misuse of and placebo effects from medications. It helps
redirect the search for care into more explicit and less dangerous com-
munications. It also encourages clinicians to emphasize basic health care
messages about diet, sleep, and exercise that many borderline patients
otherwise neglect. These messages are standard aspects of how cognitive-
behavioral therapists assist chronic pain patients. Finally, it will be a help
to such patients for other physicians to refer them for psychiatric care.
Vignette
Matthew, an 18-year-old man who used what seemed to be his girlfriend’s
idealization of him to sustain his fantasies of becoming a great poet, be-
came very agitated and had suicidal ideas when he learned of his girl-
friend’s plans to relocate to another school—despite her assurances of
ongoing love. In therapy, he talked about being enraged by the disparity
between what she meant to him and what he meant to her—“otherwise,
she would never leave.” He hated himself for “being so stupid” as to let
her mean so much.
Vignette
Mr. A, a 23-year-old man with divorced parents, developed an intense, ide-
alized relationship with his very supportive but inexperienced substance
abuse counselor. Because of Mr. A’s continuing to steal from his family
and from stores and to drive too fast despite repeated encounters with the
law, his mother sought consultation. When a change to a more confron-
tational and intensive therapy was recommended, Mr. A became very abu-
sive and threatened his mother and stepfather with a knife. When his
counselor, frightened by Mr. A’s desperate calls and by his threats to kill
himself, joined the mother in support of a change in treatment, Mr. A ran
away. The next contact from him was a telephone call apologizing for his
flight and requesting that his mother send him money to pay a debt and
transport him home.
(i.e., need for caring attention) were still dominant, but it was unclear to
what extent his past drug use, his potential violence, and his dishonesty
(i.e., antisocial personality disorder issues) made such treatment unlikely
to succeed. His telephone call for help does nothing to resolve the ques-
tion of whether his motives were exploitative or were guided by a real
wish for rapprochement. By now, his call would probably be better re-
sponded to as an exploitative and manipulative act (i.e., as if he primarily
had antisocial personality disorder).
The differentiation of these disorders has major significance to clini-
cians. To mistakenly diagnose a borderline patient as having antisocial per-
sonality disorder often consigns a potentially treatable patient to minimal
treatment. To mistakenly diagnose a patient with antisocial personality
disorder as having BPD is to initiate the ineffective use of valuable clinical
resources and to expose other patients, even the treaters, to potential ex-
ploitation and, at worse, physical harm. Having said this, the case can be
made that, when the diagnosis is in doubt, it is best to honor evidence of
the patient’s interest in treatment and to make a serious effort (Zanarini
and Gunderson 1997). Tipping the balance toward treatment are 1) evi-
dence of a hunger to be attached, 2) a capacity to bear negative feelings
(e.g., shame, envy) or self-critical attitudes, 3) any history of sustained role
functioning, 4) availability of significant supports for the treatment from
people the patient needs or respects, and 5) adequate monitoring of the
patient’s use of a therapy. Keeping an eye on these guidelines will allow cli-
nicians to stop a therapy before harmful consequences occur. Unfor-
tunately, for borderline patients who also fulfill criteria for antisocial
personality disorder, their responsiveness to treatment usually will be re-
duced (Clarkin et al. 1994).
Summary
This discussion of the most common and difficult differential diagnostic
issues has established that the boundaries separating BPD from neigh-
boring disorders are often inherently unclear. The decision about prior-
itizing the diagnosis of BPD versus that of its overlapping neighbor
should be guided by whether the treatment implications will benefit the
patient. In most instances, making treatment plans that overlook the bor-
derline diagnosis when it is present sets the stage for therapeutic im-
passes or worse (splits, regressions, countertransference enactments);
common examples where this can occur are with depression, bipolar II,
and bulimia. Still, exceptions do exist; substance abuse, anorexia, and bi-
polar I disorder require attention and stabilization before BPD can be
treated. Clearly woven into these diagnostic considerations are counter-
60 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
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Differential Diagnosis ❘ 63
OVERVIEW OF TREATMENT
Historical Overview
Changes in perspectives on the treatment of borderline personality disor-
der (BPD) since the 1970s parallel the larger shifts in psychiatry, in health
care services, and (as noted in Chapter 1) in the diagnostic construct it-
self. Psychiatry has become more medicalized, health care services have
become more diagnosis specific and cost conscious, and the borderline
diagnosis has been validated. Psychoanalysts made the initial observations
about borderline patients largely on the basis of the uniquely vexing clin-
ical problems that these patients created in testing boundaries and in re-
gressing when in unstructured settings. When Kernberg (1968) and
especially Masterson (1971, 1972) wrote optimistic reports about the
treatability of this disorder, they inspired a tide of ambitious long-term,
psychoanalytically informed treatments in both inpatient and outpatient
settings. As was shown in Figure 1–5, since 1968, 56 books about psycho-
analytic psychotherapies have been written, cresting with 19 between
1990 and 1994 (as found in a Library of Congress database search). In in-
stitutional settings, most notably in prestigious private hospitals, long-
term units devoted to treating BPD had developed by the 1980s. Both the
psychoanalytic outpatient psychotherapies and these long-term inpatient
treatments were based on ambitious hopes for curative changes.
Even as the swell of intensive long-term psychoanalytic treatments was
peaking, the excesses, limitations, and narrowness of the approach were
being recorded. Many clinicians, including notable analysts (Adler 1981,
1986; H. J. Friedman 1969; Zetzel 1971), thought that long-term institu-
tional care was regressive and that short-term stays had advantages. Oth-
ers who had worked in long-term settings noted that this care often led to
intractable control struggles (Gunderson 1984), such as Kaysen (1993)
65
66 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Containment
Containment functions to preserve or enhance the physical well-being of
people. For borderline patients, containment usually involves securing
their safety by provision of asylum from stressful situations, sometimes
even with locked doors and supervision, but usually only with monitored
food and medications. Containment refers to external imposition of con-
trol and is the most concrete form of what Winnicott (1965) referred to as
a “holding environment.” It alleviates the responsibility for self-control
and offers borderline patients a basic form of caregiving. For borderline
patients who feel angry about their responsibilities for caring for them-
selves, too much containment may become habit forming, thereby cre-
ating a regressive option that is antitherapeutic. For most borderline
patients, the initial relief at containment is followed by fears of being con-
trolled. (Medications often dramatize such a shift; see Chapter 6). Dur-
ing the course of successful treatment, borderline patients internalize
controls so that by the time they are nearly well, the holding environment
can be created and sustained by talking, and by the time they are well,
they can sustain the “holding” function intrapsychically.
Support
Support functions to make patients feel better and to enhance their self-
esteem. Support can be given by accommodating patients’ limitations
(e.g., tutors for those with learning disabilities or clarification for those
with poor reality testing). Support is most direct when it consists of as-
68 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
69
70 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Structure
Structure functions to make the environment predictable—as simple and
repetitious as possible. It involves organizing the patient’s time, place,
and person. Structure is an impersonal holding, neither invasive nor ne-
glectful. This therapeutic function is served by schedules, clarity of roles
and goals, privilege systems, controls, contracts, and clear consequences
for behaviors. It is most important in addressing the borderline individ-
ual’s socially maladaptive behaviors, such as rages or impulsivity. Struc-
ture has particular importance for BPD: its absence invites regression and
projection. It is a more central component of cognitive-behavioral ther-
apies (see Chapter 11) than dynamic therapies, and it is usually appealing
and relieving to borderline patients.
Examples of structure would be a contract regarding wrist slashing
that would mandate a visit to an emergency department and one missed
therapy session as consequences. More generally, it would mean starting
and ending sessions on time, always at the same site, and in the same
seats. Within sessions, more structure is desirable early in treatment—for
example, consistently recounting reactions to the last visit and to any in-
tervening contacts or consistently reviewing work or health issues.
Involvement
Involvement evolves from the structured interpersonal interactions with
treaters and other patients. Involvement strengthens tolerance for inter-
personal relationships and identifies and modifies maladaptive interper-
sonal traits (e.g., devaluing or idealizing). Examples are development of
shared goals and collaboration on treatment planning. All group activi-
ties make involvement a central process, especially those during which a
Overview of Treatment ❘ 71
Actualization
Actualization affirms and consolidates patients’ uniqueness—their individ-
uality—and helps them use or fulfill their potential. These goals often in-
volve customizing treatment by one-to-one talks, by attention to patients’
history, and by new learning—encouraging patients to extend themselves
into areas of uncertain competence or consequence.
For borderline patients, the process of actualization often begins by a
therapist’s developing a vision of the patient’s potential for health, com-
petence, and happiness. The process also underscores the individual’s
uniqueness and the significance of his or her life history in creating a life
narrative in which his or her own agency is recognized. It makes patients
feel understandable, less toxic, and fortunate to be alive.
are also offered in progression through the various levels and modalities
of care. The sequencing is anchored by considerations of the modalities’
usual duration, their expectable costs and benefits, their relative levels of
empirical support, and their replicability. In practice, the sequence often
involves a shift from the highest level of care (hospital settings) to the low-
est (outpatient care) via a series of intermediary step-down services (e.g.,
residential care, day care). These services and patients’ relative length of
stay are schematized in Table 5–1 and further described in Chapter 5.
Sociotherapies
The most common pair of outpatient modalities (level I in Figure 5–1)—
psychotherapy and psychopharmacology—overlook the significant con-
tribution that sociotherapies can make to treating BPD. Sociotherapies re-
fer to that middle range of therapies that more directly addresses the
observable social impairment and social adjustment issues—the issues
that Links (1993) says require a psychiatric rehabilitation model (Table 3–
2). Although the social rehabilitative needs of borderline patients are
clearly central to the structured community or milieu therapy aspects of
residential (level III) services (as discussed later), these rehabilitative
needs are usually not addressed by the time patients begin outpatient
care. At present, some manual-guided outpatient sociotherapies for BPD
have been established—namely, for some forms of family therapy (Chap-
ter 8) and group therapy (Chapter 9). Very little has been written about
and few have recognized the role of vocational rehabilitation. These mo-
dalities or others that improve social skills and adaptation need to become
more central to treatment plans and more available in outpatient clinics.
Establishing Goals:
The Expectable Sequence of Change
The growth of cost-benefit considerations, the contingence of a new stan-
dard for empirical validation, and the expansion of the cognitive-behav-
ioral paradigm have each contributed to the still-growing awareness that
treatments should have goals and that setting those goals constitutes an
essential first step in planning treatments. Within the context of treating
BPD, we have moved from the era in which goals were long-term objec-
tives stated in abstract language (improve object relations, decrease re-
liance on splitting) to less abstract but still broad goals (develop more
independence, diminish impulsivity) to the current era in which short-
term and more specific goals can be identified (learn to control temper,
ask for help). This progression may reflect stages that are inherent in the
maturation of therapeutics for any disorder, but without question these
Overview of Treatment ❘ 73
Kopta et al. (1994) that although patients’ subjective states can change
within weeks, characterological traits and self-concepts cannot be ex-
pected to change before a year in therapy. This schema is supported in a
meta-analysis of the effectiveness of psychosocial therapies for BPD. Perry
and Bond (2000) noted that subjective complaints, mood states, and glo-
bal function improved more in the first year of treatment than did social
function and interpersonal relationships. Converging evidence from ex-
isting research on schizophrenia supports the general validity of the
sequence and timetable for changes suggested here for BPD. With schizo-
phrenia patients, symptom remission, diminished family conflict, and im-
proved social skills function can be accomplished within a year (Hogarty
et al. 1986). This treatment still, however, leaves the successfully treated
patients interpersonally isolated and anhedonic, thus setting the stage
for individual therapies (Hogarty et al. 1997).
Table 3–3 and Figure 3–2 elaborate on the sequence of and approxi-
mate timetable for changes that are expectable in successful treatments of
BPD. It is important to recognize that this timetable is schematic—that
there are significant variations, depending on the stage from which bor-
derline patients start treatment (e.g., some are very unaware of anger, some
are successfully employed). This account of expectable changes is revisited
elsewhere in this book in the sequence of therapeutic functions (earlier in
this chapter) and in describing levels of care (Chapter 5), the sequence of
changes in family intervention (Chapter 8), and the sequence of changes
within psychotherapies (Chapters 10 and 12). The clinical value of identi-
fying the sequence and timetable for expectable changes is that therapists,
patients, and families can make more discerning judgments about thera-
peutic effectiveness (Sidebar 3–1). Failure to see the “expected” change
does not mean that such therapies are not being beneficial. It means that
the question should be raised whether the therapeutic services could be
improved. The best way to address these issues is by consultation.
out dependency but built on shared interests and depth of caring, are tri-
umphs that signal someone as no longer having BPD. Although this may
occur by the third year of treatment, such progress would be unusual.
Primary Clinician
It is essential that a primary clinician be identified who will assume respon-
sibility for each patient’s safety and treatment. This person’s role inevitably
involves serving as case manager (see Chapter 4). The role also may include
being the patient’s psychotherapist, but only if the clinician has suitable
training and the patient indicates an interest in change (see Chapter 10).
Short-Term Goals
Short-term goals establish a task orientation for any therapy: it is for the
purpose of change. Realistic goals such as diminished anxiety and suicid-
Overview of Treatment ❘ 81
Psychoeducation
Although psychoeducational approaches for borderline patients had
been proposed many years ago (Benjamin 1993; Brightman 1992), this
approach is still not widely practiced or even seen as desirable (Ruiz-
Sancho et al. 2001). As noted in Chapter 1, I suggest that BPD patients
and those they live with should uniformly be familiarized with the diag-
nosis, including its expectable course, responsiveness to treatments, and
known pathogenetic factors. Psychoeducational methods are appropri-
ate and are generally welcomed by both patients and their families.
The psychoeducational approach is based on the hope that patients
diagnosed as having BPD or the people who live with or love them will
benefit from learning about the disorder (Table 3–4). It rests heavily on
the medical model of BPD as an illness. In this model, the behavior prob-
lems associated with BPD are sequelae to underlying neurobiological ab-
normalities over which they can exert only weak or inconsistent control.
This message is usually welcome to patients (G. Rubovszky, J.G. Gunder-
son, I. Weinberg, “Patients’ Reactions to Disclosure of the Borderline Per-
sonality Disorder Diagnosis,” unpublished manuscript, November 2007).
It is reassuring to know they are not alone with their disorder and that a
body of knowledge is available about this disorder and its treatment. It
also conveys hope, insofar as BPD generally has a good prognosis. In-
forming patients about their disorder can make them more aware of how
their feelings, behaviors, and thinking can cause problems. In my expe-
rience, it encourages intellectualization (a form of “mentalizing,” as in
Fonagy et al. 1991) and with this, a type of valuable constraint on action.
As noted elsewhere (Chapters 5 and 12), I am very explicit in making pre-
dictions about how BPD patients can expect to respond to forthcoming
situations (e.g., a vacation or a step-down in level of care). If priority is be-
ing given to treating comorbid Axis I conditions, such as substance abuse,
depression, posttraumatic stress disorder, or eating disorders (see Chap-
ter 2), useful cautions about the overall prognosis for that Axis I condi-
82 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
tion can be given. As noted in Chapter 1, the simplest and most common
psychoeducational intervention involves the diagnosis itself. Patients usu-
ally welcome reading the DSM-IV-TR text (American Psychiatric Associa-
tion 2000) and describing how the criteria do or do not apply to them
(see Chapter 2). In a more general way, it helps to demystify and destig-
matize the diagnosis. By informing patients about treatment options and
the potential for change, psychoeducation helps establish realistic expec-
tations for treatment and a greater likelihood of complying with treat-
ment (G. Rubovszky, J. G. Gunderson, I. Weinberg, “Patients’ Reactions
to Disclosure of the Borderline Personality Disorder Diagnosis,” unpub-
lished manuscript, November 2007). Psychoeducation is often done dur-
ing early sessions with case managers (Chapter 4) or with individual
psychotherapy when a treatment plan or “contract” is being developed
(see Chapter 10).
Countertransference
No report about treating BPD can fail to note the strong countertransfer-
ence responses that such patients evoke and the frequency with which
those responses are destructive to therapies of all kinds. The classic paper
on countertransference hate by Maltsberger and Buie (1974) was written
from experience with borderline patients. Gabbard and Wilkinson
(1994) provide a comprehensive and clinically valuable guide to this es-
sential topic. So strong is this feature that even the diagnosis itself carries
countertransference weight (as described in Sidebar 1–5). A distinction
can be made between emotional or attitudinal responses to characteris-
tics of borderline patients (e.g., neediness or anger) that may determine
whether a clinician will want to work with them and the emotional or at-
titudinal responses that are evoked as an outgrowth of getting involved
with a patient. The latter are what can greatly affect whether a clinician
will find that involvement personally rewarding and effective.
As is evident throughout this book, no clinical role offers a safe retreat
from potential transference-countertransference enactments with bor-
derline patients. Having said this, the more central one’s responsibilities,
the more intensive the contracts, and the more involving one’s interac-
tional style, the more likely it is that transference-countertransference
problems will arise. Psychopharmacological and cognitive-behavioral in-
terventions enhance early positive transferences by their explicit and
structured efforts to relieve subjective distress. Psychoanalytic therapies
invite more negative transference in that they emphasize the role of in-
terpretive rather than supportive interventions and in that they invite
projections by virtue of their usual lack of structure, neutrality, and en-
couragement of a patient’s self-disclosure.
Overview of Treatment ❘ 85
Summary
This chapter offers an overview of the processes of change and sequence
of treatment modalities involved in the treatment of BPD. It offers cli-
nicians and patients a conceptual infrastructure by which they can orga-
nize treatment plans and by which they can determine whether progress
is occurring—in essence, a structure for deciding whether a treatment
program is well suited to the patient’s changing goals and needs. It estab-
lishes the road map for the rest of the book, which follows the progress of
borderline patients from the issues of being so severely impaired and sui-
cidal that their lives are tenuous to eventually addressing psychological
conflicts about issues such as competition and intimacy that interfere
with their life’s quality.
References
Adler G: The myth of the alliance with borderline patients. Am J Psychi-
atry 136:642–645, 1979
Adler G: The borderline patient in the general hospital. Gen Hosp Psy-
chiatry 3:297–300, 1981
Adler G: Borderline Psychopathology and Its Treatment. New York, Jason
Aronson, 1986
Agrawal HR, Gunderson JG, Holmes BM, et al: Attachment studies with
borderline patients: a review. Harv Rev Psychiatry 12:94–104, 2004
American Psychiatric Association: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders, 4th Edition, Text Revision. Washington, DC,
American Psychiatric Association, 2000
Bateman A, Fonagy P: Psychotherapy for Borderline Personality Disor-
der—Mentalization-Based Treatment. Oxford, England, Oxford
University Press, 2004
86 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
CASE MANAGEMENT
The Primary Clinician
89
90 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
help assess benefits, and the like. The primary clinician may evolve into a
role that is primarily psychotherapeutic, but initially the required re-
sponsibilities include administrative functions (e.g., monitoring safety,
implementing treatment recommendations) that may in themselves be
therapeutic but will often take precedence over traditional psychothera-
peutic activities (e.g., self-disclosure, insight, affect recognition).
Qualifications
Any mental health clinician who is experienced with borderline patients
and who combines good judgment and a readiness to communicate with
others can fulfill the primary clinician role. Even mental health workers
without professional degrees who have years of experience in inpatient
or residential treatment settings can become very skilled. Nonetheless,
the expectable safety issues, the judgment questions around level of care,
and the potential legal complications of the required decisions mean that
there are definite advantages in having psychiatrists fill this role. Psychi-
atrists generally have more training in making these judgments (and ex-
perience shows that even when their assigned role is modest, they will
probably be included in any legal action to collect damages). The psychi-
atrist’s advantages are outweighed, however, when his or her contacts
with the patient are limited and an experienced and capable clinician
from another discipline, usually a psychologist or social worker, is seeing
the patient more intensely, knows the patient better, or has a stronger al-
liance. Regardless of discipline, no one should undertake the role of pri-
mary clinician without significant experience or, in its absence, without
ongoing supervision by an experienced clinician.
Responsibilities
As outlined in Table 4–1, the responsibilities assumed by a borderline pa-
tient’s primary clinician involve complicated clinical judgments. The
issue of monitoring safety is the most important and is given extended
discussion later in this chapter.
The first task is to establish a contractual alliance (as described in Chap-
ter 3). This is often begun by educating both the patient (Chapters 1 and
3) and his or her family (Chapter 8) about the diagnosis. Regarding rec-
ommended therapies, the contractual alliance is established through dis-
cussion with the patient about what roles will be played and what the
goals of therapy will be. Both DBT (Linehan 1993) and transference-
focused psychotherapy (Kernberg et al. in press) recommend an exten-
sive process in which the patient’s motivation for the treatment is assessed
Case Management ❘ 91
(and tested) and in which the limits of the clinician’s role are elucidated
(e.g., contingencies for continuation, unavailability except for true emer-
gencies). No doubt the resulting selectivity is important when conduct-
ing research intended to confirm the value of therapies. However, this
selectivity is not usually available to clinicians who are assigned or re-
ferred patients who need treatment and for whom they are assuming re-
sponsibility, including making judgments about the appropriateness of
any type of treatment. For primary clinicians, including those who do not
assume a psychotherapeutic role (e.g., psychopharmacologists; see Chap-
ter 6), the development of an alliance is a mandate, not an option.
The primary clinician combines administrative (i.e., management
and assessment) tasks with alliance-building therapeutic activities (e.g.,
engagement, support, and, when necessary, confrontation). Clinicians
who accept responsibility for the care of borderline patients during or af-
ter a crisis must provide what the patient needs, if possible; these clini-
cians do not have the privilege of saying, “I offer this type of therapy, and
if it isn’t suitable, goodbye.” At the same time, experience and good judg-
ment are necessary to know when a treatment is inappropriate or un-
workable. As described throughout this book, it requires skill to manage
92 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Liability Issues
Gutheil (1985, 1989) noted that borderline patients are particularly
likely to involve their treaters in liability suits. Without question, this is re-
lated to these patients’ ongoing suicide risks, their tendency to project
malevolence, and the fact that borderline patients are usually—and op-
timally—treated by teams. Psychiatrists usually carry a disproportionate
level of liability risk, but the principles that help diminish such risk are
relevant to all members of a team. Sidebar 4–1 offers some guidelines on
how primary clinicians can conduct their tasks and minimize the dangers
of having liability suits. Sidebar 6–2 addresses the more specific liability is-
sues related to split treatment—when a psychiatrist assumes primarily a psy-
chopharmacologist role.
Case Management ❘ 93
Relationship Management
Dawson and MacMillan (1993) made a significant contribution to the
treatment wisdom for borderline patients with their book Relationship
Management and the Borderline Patient. Unlike most books that emphasize
ways to interpret or confront borderline patients’ relational problems
with treaters, Dawson and MacMillan move into operational ways to side-
step these problems and have borderline patients be responsibly involved
in their own treatment—or otherwise not be in treatment at all. Central
to their thesis is that the traditional proactive approaches of psychiatrists
94 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Managing Safety
Assessing Suicidality
Because of apprehensions about the legal, administrative, and psycholog-
ical consequences should a suicide occur, mental health professionals
feel highly anxious about distinguishing true suicidal intentions from
Case Management ❘ 95
Vignette
Ms. B, a 27-year-old woman with BPD, had been pleading for admission.
On learning that discharge was recommended by the consulting psychia-
trist, the on-duty emergency physician was surprised. He asked the psychi-
atrist why he was discharging the patient because he thought for sure that
she would be admitted. The consultant replied, “I know Ms. B pretty
well.... let me see if I can explain this” (he drew a diagram similar to Fig-
ure 4–1). “Ms. B is clearly a risk for suicide and much above the risk of
someone in the general population. But this risk is chronic. I have seen
her here in the emergency department several times over the last year,
and the chronic level of risk seems unchanged. I don’t see any point in
placing her in the hospital. A short stay in the hospital won’t change her
chronic level of risk. But I did try to motivate her to do something about
her drinking. I think a lot of her suicidal feelings are related to her drink-
ing and told her so. She wasn’t ready to hear this from me, but she did say
she would speak with her regular physician tomorrow. I will let him know
she was here.”
Case Management ❘ 97
A Preventive Stance
Primary clinicians should early and often advise borderline patients that
the clinicians view suicidal acts as dangerous distractions from the pa-
98 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Vignette
Ms. C, a 28-year-old woman, began treatment while hospitalized for an
overdose. Her primary aftercare clinician, also her therapist, had seen her
once weekly while she attended an interpersonal group and attempted to
reenter graduate training.
Two weeks after discharge from the hospital, she called the primary
clinician at 11:00 P.M. on a weeknight:
Ms. C (in a weak voice): I’m sorry to call, but I’ve been feeling strange,
unsafe, out of control.
Therapist (waits, then asks): When did this start?
Ms. C: I don’t know.... I’ve been getting worse for awhile.
Therapist (no response).
Ms. C: You’re not saying much.
Therapist: I’d like to help, but I’m unclear about what I can do. Did
you have some ideas?
Case Management ❘ 99
Ms. C: No.
Therapist: Hmm.
Ms. C: What does that mean?!
Therapist (no response).
Ms. C: I guess you can’t help me.
Therapist: That’s what I was fearing too.
Ms. C: Then what should I do?
Therapist: I do hope you will take good care of yourself and make use
of the emergency services if necessary.
1
Contracting for safety is very different from contracting for therapy,
although the latter may include expecting patients to take care of safety
issues (for example, see Kernberg et al. 1989 or Plakun 1994).
100 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Vignette
Patient: I’m sorry to call, but I’ve been feeling strange, unsafe, out of
control.
Therapist (waits, then asks): When did this start?
Patient: I don’t know. ... (Irritably): How the hell can I think about
that?! Didn’t you hear me say that I feel unsafe, out of control?! I’m stand-
ing here with a bottle of pills.
Therapist (waits, then): You need me to respond to the fact that
you’re at risk?
Patient: Yes!
Therapist: This is a crisis?
Patient: Yes!
Therapist: How can I help?
Patient: I don’t know! You’re the fucking doctor; you should know.
Therapist: I wish I did.
Patient: Are you telling me you don’t know how you can help me?!
Therapist: (no response).
Patient: Is that what you’re saying?!
Therapist: I hope you won’t hurt yourself.
Patient (starts weeping): Oh God, I just don’t know what to do. I feel
so awful.
Therapist: I know you do. I can hear that.
Patient: It all started yesterday.. . . (begins to narrate a detailed re-
counting of the intervening events).
102 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
In this instance, the patient’s desperation and anger move the thera-
pist to address more directly the patient’s at-risk behaviors. Even here,
however, he enlists the patient in articulating that she is in a crisis and in
identifying how she wants him to respond. As is usually the case, she as a
borderline patient has trouble saying what is wanted. Unspoken is that
she wants concerned attention. Also unspoken is what the primary clini-
cian should know in this situation: that if the patient is given license to
ventilate, the immediate danger of self-harm will dissipate. After the ex-
change in this vignette, the therapist slept comfortably.
In the session following the exchange above, the therapist insisted,
against the patient’s protests, on discussing what had transpired. He iden-
tified how “surprisingly angry” the patient had become when he did not
immediately express concern for her safety and when he said that he
didn’t know what she wanted him to do to help.
Patient (irritably): I’m sorry for getting so angry, but it was a crisis.
I guess you’ve never been through what I go through.
Therapist (sidestepping her anger): When you began to talk about
what was bothering you, that seemed to have helped.
Patient: Yes, it really did. I appreciated that you listened.
Therapist: That was most interesting to me. What seemed to help was
just having someone listen. I didn’t do anything. How can that be?
The patient then discussed how rare it had been to have someone lis-
ten to her. The therapist used this exchange to educate the patient about
theory, suggesting that some people (with BPD) get overwhelmingly pan-
icked when they do not have someone available to offer comfort and that
such people find aloneness intolerable. That led to a discussion of the pa-
tient’s living situation and alternative sources of comfort. He added that
although he was glad to have proved useful, it was dangerous for her
safety to depend on his availability. Moreover, providing comfort was not
a function he could serve too often without disrupting his own life. (He
thereby actively drew attention to his own limits, as opposed to setting
limits on the patient—as detailed later in this chapter, section “Bound-
aries, Violations, and Setting Limits.”)
ness of the intentions and creates moral and ethical dilemmas (Fine and
Sansone 1990; Frances and Miller 1989). The clinician usually feels that
questioning the seriousness of the patient’s suicidal intentions could
magnify the likelihood and lethality of an attempt. Beyond this, the clini-
cian will know that hospitalizations—the usual response to suicidality—
can rarely address the underlying causes of the suicidality and might in
fact perpetuate the borderline patient’s allegations of suicidality (as a re-
sult of the secondary gains of being rescued, getting attention, and avoid-
ing the problems of living in the community).
Vignette
Ms. D, a 35-year-old, disheveled, agitated, overweight, single woman, ap-
peared for her first clinic appointment. She promptly stated that she was
grateful to “now have a therapist,” and that she had needed one for 3
years. The evaluating clinician felt uneasy about the role of “therapist”
that he had been assigned by the patient, but before he could address this
the patient went on to say that she felt very suicidal. In response to the cli-
nician’s inquiries, she reported that she had been suicidal “off and on for
many years” and had already had 31 hospitalizations.
Clinician: What has caused you to become suicidal now?
Ms. D: I don’t know; what difference does it make? (now becoming ir-
ritated and defensive)
Clinician: Has anything happened in your life recently? (Clinician is
skeptical about the patient’s lethality and hoping to isolate specific events
that can be addressed but already is feeling highly anxious about the pa-
tient’s volatility and potential flight.)
Ms. D: All I know is that I visited my parents and became very upset
and had to leave. No, I don’t know why. No, they didn’t say anything. Yes,
it’s happened before, and last time I nearly killed myself.
Clinician: What happened?
Ms. D: I drank a quart of vodka and then took any fucking pills I could
find.. .. I would have been dead if my landlord hadn’t noticed that the
television was on all night.
Clinician (now convinced that the patient is dangerous, but still feeling
coerced into suggesting hospitalization): Are you feeling that way again?
Ms. D: I just want to get control of myself. If I can’t, I’m going to slash
my neck. This time I don’t want to fail.
Clinician: Would you like to go into the hospital?
Ms. D: I need to.
nician will usually feel coerced, manipulated, and helpless. Still, in the
absence of alternatives that can surely safeguard the patient, he is offering
her the safest and most expedient response by suggesting hospitalization.
In a thoughtful disquisition on this borderline-specific dilemma,
Behnke and Saks (1998) argued that an extended informed-consent pro-
cess (using contracting in DBT as an example in which the patient com-
mits to treatment goals) can redirect such patients’ intentions. This is true
for patients soliciting treatment, a situation in which clinicians have the
choice of saying that they cannot help an unmotivated patient. But the di-
lemma stated in the previous paragraph was felt very acutely by Ms. D’s cli-
nician, who did not have the choice of turning down the patient’s request
for help. The problem for the field of therapeutic jurisprudence is whether
the law can protect clinicians who keep such patients out of hospitals—
basing their decision on the patient’s welfare and acknowledging what
Maltsberger (1994) referred to as a “calculated risk” of death—rather than
hospitalizing the patient because it protects the clinician’s welfare. Having
identified the problem, Behnke and Saks could offer no remedy.
My own approach to this situation starts by making the dilemma ex-
plicit. I tell patients such as Ms. D that hospitalization would be the safest
option but that it is not likely to be helpful and probably would be harm-
ful to her longer-term welfare. I explain that hospitalization involves in-
viting others to assume control of the patient’s life and that this can
discourage learning self-control. Moreover, I say that for many patients
such “rescues” become a way of feeling cared for and that being hospital-
ized feels like being adopted, although that is not actually what hospital-
izations mean. I tell these patients, “To me, offering hospitalization to you
primarily represents a way to avoid my being legally liable should you
commit suicide. I actually believe the more caring response would be to
try to keep you out of a hospital despite the potential risk to me.” I then
tell them that in my judgment the best way to proceed would be to take
the time needed to see why they are recurrently suicidal and to develop a
treatment plan that addresses those reasons. Patients are often unsur-
prised by such statements, and a different negotiation then occurs, as
seen in the following vignette:
Vignette
Patient: Are you saying that you really think it’s a mistake to go into
the hospital?
Clinician: Not if you’d otherwise kill yourself, but if you stay alive
you’d be better off without it.
Patient: Are you saying you won’t put me in a hospital?
Clinician: No, of course not. It would be “suicidal” for me to try to pre-
vent a potentially suicidal patient like you [note that therapist does not
Case Management ❘ 105
Implementing Changes
When implementing changes in treatment of BPD, the primary clinician
must proceed with sensitivity and caution. It is easy to unwittingly evoke a
response in which the borderline patient desperately or defiantly clings
106 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
more tightly to the ineffective therapy. The mechanism for this angry re-
sistance to a proposed change often involves evoking a split, whereby the
primary clinician is seen as cruelly depriving the patient rather than try-
ing to help. Therefore, the way in which the need for change is commu-
nicated to a patient is very important. Autocratic announcements usually
will evoke resistance, but even when accepted, they can be harmful be-
cause they do not improve the patient’s self-awareness about his or her
needs or about the ways in which these needs can be communicated. Cer-
tainly, recommendations for change—especially if they involve changes
to less-intensive services—should be accompanied by empathic anticipa-
tion that the changes will be difficult. Giving “you can do it” assurances
causes borderline patients to feel that the therapist is minimizing their
difficulties. It is also of critical importance that the primary clinician ini-
tiate communications with the collaborating member(s) of the therapy
team, and with the patient, to ensure that everyone is aware of and in-
volved in all treatment planning. Most clinicians who like working with
borderline patients learn to do this quite comfortably; clinicians who are
hesitant about addressing problems usually avoid this sector of psychiatry.
therapists may adhere too rigidly to “professional” rules and become un-
duly hesitant to become deeply involved with borderline patients. This
anxiety may be manifest in disproportionate impatience about a minor
transgression such as lateness or an intersession contact. On the contrary,
increased consciousness about this topic may underscore the importance
of extensive supervision, use of consultants, and attention to counter-
transference.
Colson et al. (1985) noted that the psychotherapies with the most
negative outcomes in the Menninger Psychotherapy Research Project
were those in which therapists were content to interpret acting-out be-
haviors without setting limits. Table 4–3 identifies a sequence of re-
sponses that usually sidestep the necessity of setting limits. Limits are
sometimes valuable, but usually they reflect impatience or fearfulness on
the part of therapists who are uninformed about or do not trust the pro-
cess described in this table. It can be very difficult to insist that patients
talk about the meaning behind their undesirable behaviors, but this dis-
cussion is essential for patients to understand and respect the limits on a
therapist’s availability, support, or knowledge. Such discussions provide
the cornerstone for resolution and prevention of boundary transgres-
sions.
Central to the process described in Table 4–3 is that the clinician rec-
ognize his or her own limits. These limits should be compatible with com-
passion and with accepting a responsible role in monitoring patient
safety. But, having said this, it must be added that limits also should be
compatible with the clinician’s personal and professional welfare. When
they are at risk, the limits should be introduced as originating in oneself
(steps 4 and 5 in the table). Being clear that it is the clinician’s limitation,
while remaining empathic about the patient’s wishes, rather than hostile,
is almost always accepted by borderline patients.
As a further note, clinicians must set only limits that he or she can re-
inforce (e.g., it would be fruitless to set a limit on when a patient goes to
bed) and ensure that contingencies are proportional to the problem
(e.g., it would be unfair to view lateness as incompatible with a therapy’s
goals). Diminishing the number or duration of appointments, requiring
discussion with the patient’s family, or obtaining a consultation should
precede the more extreme limit of terminating the treatment.
in life that allows a child to ignore or dissociate (split off) negative hostile
perceptions of his or her needed other, thereby preserving a “good,” al-
beit distorted, representation (a part object) of that other. Within the larger
mental health community, this defense became identifiable by the border-
line patient’s tendency to perceive others in dichotomous, “all-good” or
“all-bad” terms and then to treat others very differently (idealized or de-
valued, respectively), depending on which side of the internal split they
occupied. Because of this tendency to split, prior generations of clinicians
have been warned to beware of splitting lest they develop antagonistic
views toward the member(s) of a treatment team who are on the opposite
side of the patients’ split or lest they otherwise get involved in counter-
transference enactments (Gabbard 1989, 1994).
As described elsewhere (Gunderson 1984), the splitting between ob-
jects is not simply a product of the borderline patients’ splits—that is,
their projections—but is predictably based on whether the other is in fact
frustrating or supportive. In this way, the “projections” are well suited to
the recipients (i.e., are based on real characteristics of the objects). As
such, the splitting reflects an interpersonal as opposed to a purely intra-
Case Management ❘ 109
failures, cruelties, and so forth of the other “bad” therapist. The “good”
therapist should neither agree with the patient nor defend the other—simply en-
courage the borderline patient to express complaints directly to the ob-
ject of the complaints. Split treatments are advantageous to borderline
patients if provided by knowledgeable and mutually respectful clinicians.
If not, split treatments may be harmful and may increase liability risks
(see Sidebars 4–1 and 6–2).
Summary
To clarify and simplify the process of clinical decision making, someone
needs to be clearly identifiable as a borderline patient’s primary clinician,
sometimes referred to as case administrator. The person in this role also
may fill other roles, but insofar as the borderline patient still requires lim-
its, safety interventions, or unwanted confrontations, it is difficult for the
primary clinician also to serve as a patient’s dynamic psychotherapist (at
least within the transference-focused psychotherapy model, described in
Chapter 12) until the patient progresses into a second phase of treatment
(see Chapters 3 and 12). The role of primary clinician is compatible with
being a patient’s family group therapist, cognitive-behavioral therapist,
or psychopharmacologist. Central to a primary clinician’s tasks is the abil-
ity to communicate with the patient’s significant others (both family and
treaters) and to make good clinical judgments about whether a patient is
progressing or is safe and, if not, to implement solutions effectively. A
stance about safety issues that involves much inquiry and minimal action
is suggested.
Case Management ❘ 111
References
Behnke SH, Saks ER: Therapeutic jurisprudences: informed consent as
a clinical indication for the chronically suicidal patient with border-
line personality disorder. Loyola Law Review 31:945–982, 1998
Colson DB, Lewis L, Horwitz L: Negative effects in psychotherapy and
psychoanalysis, in Negative Outcome in Psychotherapy and What to
Do About It. Edited by Mays DT, Franks CM. New York, Springer,
1985, pp 59–75
Dawson D, MacMillan HL: Relationship Management and the Border-
line Patient. New York, Brunner/Mazel, 1993
Fine MA, Sansone RA: Dilemmas in the management of suicidal behav-
ior in individuals with borderline personality disorder. Am J Psy-
chother 44:160–171, 1990
Frances AJ, Miller LJ: Coordinating inpatient and outpatient treatment
for a chronically suicidal woman. Hosp Community Psychiatry 40:
468–470, 1989
Gabbard GO: Splitting in hospital treatment. Am J Psychiatry 146:444–
451, 1989
Gabbard GO: Treatment of borderline patients in a multiple-treater set-
ting. Psychiatr Clin North Am 17:839–850, 1994
Gabbard GO: Long-Term Psychodynamic Psychotherapy: A Basic Text.
Washington, DC, American Psychiatric Publishing, 2004
Gunderson JG: Borderline Personality Disorder. Washington, DC, Amer-
ican Psychiatric Press, 1984
Gutheil TG: Medicolegal pitfalls in the treatment of borderline patients.
Am J Psychiatry 142:9–14, 1985
Gutheil TG: Borderline personality disorder, boundary violations, and
patient-therapist sex: medicolegal pitfalls. Am J Psychiatry 146:597–
602, 1989
Gutheil TG, Gabbard GO: The concept of boundaries in clinical prac-
tice: theoretical and risk-management dimensions. Am J Psychiatry
150:188–196, 1993
Kernberg O, Selzer M, Koenigsberg HW, et al: Psychodynamic Psycho-
therapy of Borderline Patients. New York, Basic Books, 1989
Kernberg O, Yeomans F, Clarkin JF: Transference focused psychother-
apy: overview and update. Int J Psychoanal (in press)
Klein M: Notes on some schizoid mechanisms. Int J Psychoanal 27:99–
110, 1946
Kolla NJ, Eisenberg H, Links PS: Epidemiology, risk factors, and psycho-
pharmacological management of suicidal behavior in borderline
personality disorder. Arch Suicide Res 12:1–19, 2008
Linehan MM: Cognitive-Behavioral Treatment of Borderline Personality
Disorder. New York, Guilford, 1993
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Links PS, Kolla N: Assessing and managing suicide risk, in The American
Psychiatric Publishing Textbook of Personality Disorders. Edited by
Oldham J, Skodol AE, Bender DS. Washington, DC, American Psy-
chiatric Publishing, 2005, pp 449–462
Maltsberger JT: Calculated risks in the treatment of intractably suicidal
patients. Psychiatry 57:199–212, 1994
Plakun EM: Principles in the psychotherapy of self-destructive border-
line patients. J Psychother Pract Res 3:138–148, 1994
Waldinger RJ: Intensive psychodynamic therapy with borderline pa-
tients: an overview. Am J Psychiatry 144:267–274, 1987
Chapter 5
LEVELS OF CARE
Indications, Structure, Staffing
113
114 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Level IV:
Hospital Treatment—Makes Therapy Possible
Until the 1990s, long-term hospitalizations were feasible and considered
to be highly desirable options for treating BPD. Although there remains
a role for long-term hospitalizations (at least 6 months), the indications
for it are rare (Sidebar 5–1). Hospitalizations now are usually 2–14 days in
duration, and the following discussion focuses on such short-term stays,
which are both the norm and usually more beneficial (Gunderson 1984;
Gunderson et al. 2005; Nurnberg and Suh 1978; Sederer and Thorbeck
1986; Silk et al. 1994).
❘
BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
IV Hospital Crisis management 2–14 days C
Medication Assessments
Psychoeducation Treatment planning
involved in the goal component (in the column furthest right). Type components do not relate one for one to the goal components, lengths
of stay, or processes.
bLengths of stay are estimates based on the author’s experience when the appropriate step-down level of care is available.
c
C =containment; I= involvement; St= structure; Su= support; V=validation (see Chapter 3 for explanation of terms).
❘117
118 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Vignette
Ms. E, a 28-year-old woman with a history of substance abuse and promis-
cuity, has been prescribed increasing doses of tranquilizing and sedating
medications. She presented herself to her state mental health depart-
ment caseworker as affectively blunted and mentally dull. She angrily dis-
missed outright, or failed to follow through on, all treatments arranged by
her caseworker. It was unclear whether her obtunded mental state was
due to misuse of her prescriptions. Hospitalization was recommended to
adjust medications, evaluate her problems (e.g., hostility, missed appoint-
ments) with her psychiatrist and caseworker, and assess whether her di-
vorced parents could offer more consistent supports, including possibly
residence.
that would be impossible elsewhere. Following are the major goals and
the usual time required for meeting them:
Structure
To establish the businesslike, practical orientation that allows the above
goals to be reached efficiently, it is useful to have clarity and simplicity in
the inpatient units’ structures. This means a clear hierarchy, fixed roles,
and consistent policies. Each patient needs to have a case manager or co-
ordinator who processes the patient’s wishes and makes the administra-
tive decisions. The administratively responsible psychiatrist during the
hospitalization needs to assess the patient, preside over treatment plans,
delegate tasks, and prescribe medications. (Sidebar 5–2 provides discus-
sion of how psychotherapeutic technique relates to levels of care.) A so-
cial worker or the case manager or coordinator needs to assess with the
patient what are the available social supports, especially family, and in-
Levels of Care ❘ 121
Staff
The ideal staff within hospital programs are comfortable but impersonal
about setting limits, recognize (preferably even enjoy) but do not enact
provocations (see Sidebar 5–2), and focus on the patients’ community liv-
ing situations and needs rather than on the patients’ in-hospital behav-
iors. Although staff can be selected with these attitudes in mind, the
development of this desirable approach often is acquired only by consid-
122 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
erable experience. This means that units should consciously avoid having
too many inexperienced staff and should actively inculcate these atti-
tudes for those who are new. The primary danger with inexperienced
staff is that they are often hesitant to actively direct the borderline pa-
tients’ attention to their precipitating situational crises and to the need to
plan their aftercare.
Generic inpatient units are capable of fulfilling very well the goals of
hospitalization suitable for borderline patients, but the staff of such units
need to be attuned to the special needs of borderline patients for clear
structure, treatment goals, and the staff supervision or meetings required
to safeguard against splits. Generic units that are too medically oriented
or too organized around the low-stimulus needs of psychotic patients will
be likely to foster—unwittingly—staff hostility toward the emotional and
time demands typically made by borderline patients. At best, hostility may
result in strict limits and early discharges, but this is less than optimal.
Units that do not welcome the challenges posed by borderline patients
are likely to aggravate the problems they dread.
Level III:
Residential/Partial Hospital Care/Day Treatment—
Basic Socialization
Level III includes residential care per se, meaning round-the-clock psy-
chiatric services in settings that are less intensively monitored and less
restrictive than are hospitals. Level III also includes two divisions: day
treatment and night care (usually a halfway house). These types of level
III services offer sufficient holding of the patient to reduce suicidality to
a degree that allows extramural activities (Stone 1990). During the pe-
riod that borderline patients spend in level III, they establish a contractual
alliance with their primary clinician by defining and agreeing on roles
and goals and begin work on a relational alliance with the primary clini-
cian and/or with a therapist (see Chapter 3 for discussion of types of al-
liance). Also in this level of care, the medication changes introduced
during hospitalization, or during recent outpatient upheavals, can be sta-
bilized, and both the benefits and the use of medications (e.g., compli-
ance) can be monitored. For patients in full residential care, it is critical
for the patient’s primary clinician or case manager to actively help the pa-
tient arrange for room and board (night care) if the patient will be stay-
ing in day care or to help arrange for structured community activities that
will enable the patient to leave day care while continuing to need night
care. As noted in Table 5–1, the primary goals of level III services involve
social rehabilitation.
Levels of Care ❘ 123
Vignette
Arthur, a 16-year-old boy who lived with his mother, used both head bang-
ing and violence (breaking dishes, threatening to strike her) to intimi-
date and control her. His mother’s retreat into excessive use of anxiolytics
escalated his threats to the point that he threatened her with a knife.
School counselors were impressed by his aptitude and likeability but con-
cerned about his deteriorating school performance and identified a need
for a consistent, structured living situation to enable him to get to school
on time, to help him control his anger, and to help his mother develop
better coping strategies. His mother and his therapist agreed enthusiasti-
cally. An adolescent residential program that could allow him to com-
mute to school proved unavailable, so he went to a halfway house with
young adults.
Goals
• Teach or stabilize daily living skills (e.g., eating, sleeping, hygiene). The need
for this goal varies, as does the optimal approach to achieving it. Most
borderline patients need consistent monitoring and education about
the importance of eating and sleeping in regular patterns. Introduc-
tion of sleep medications may prove useful for borderline patients
who often will have trouble getting to sleep because of fearfulness.
• Initiate vocational rehabilitation. This goal is typically the most likely to
be overlooked. Borderline patients do not introduce it or welcome it,
even though these patients are typically underachievers with inconsis-
tent work histories. Young or inexperienced staff may have little con-
sciousness of the value and importance of these issues. In contrast,
this goal is often profoundly important to parents (and for anyone
with public health considerations). Program administrators or pri-
mary clinicians usually determine whether it is addressed.
An important component of level III services is the availability of
vocational rehabilitation services. The feelings and actions of border-
line patients so often preoccupy clinical staff that they can easily over-
look enduring impairments in social function (Sidebar 5–3).
Becoming a Caregiver
Many BPD patients will want to pursue or return to work that
involves caregiving functions. It is wise to caution them that
such work is invariably stressful for people who themselves
need caregiving and/or who perceive that they have not
gotten adequate care in the past. If patients nevertheless
insist on this field, encourage them to move slowly: plants
before pets before people. Certainly, the ability to assume
responsibility for a pet is a useful indicator of aptitude. Here
too there is a hierarchy: start with fish, go to rodents, then
cats, and finally dogs. For patients who insist on pursuing
the delivery of human services, the likelihood of success will
be inversely related to the likelihood of negative (hostile or
critical) feedback and the level of responsibility. Thus, work-
ing with people who have dementia is better than working
with adolescents, and working as an aide is better than
working as a nurse.
Staff
To facilitate attachment, identification, and transferences, it is desirable
for the staff of level III services to have a mixture of gender, age, levels of
experience, and even attitudes (see discussion of splitting, Chapter 4).
Regular staff meetings are needed to facilitate communication, examine
countertransference, address splits, retain focus on goals, assess progress,
provide education, and develop a case formulation (a way of understand-
ing the sources and meaning of the patients’ symptoms).
As in hospitals (level IV), each patient needs a staff case manager or
coordinator, preferably a full-time nonprofessional mental health
worker, whose responsibility is to implement the treatment plan, monitor
126 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
progress, and help patients address the how-to issues of coping with daily
life and goal attainment. This person needs to be in regular communica-
tion with the patient’s primary clinician (usually the therapist) to imple-
ment or change treatment plans. When, as is usually the case, the level III
service has its own administrative personnel, the case manager or coordi-
nator needs to clarify whether or when the patient’s primary clinician or
therapist defers decision-making authority to the program administrator.
This, I think, should depend on the expected length of stay: for residen-
tial stays of less than 1 month, the primary clinician or therapist is best left
in charge; for longer residential stays, the program administrator should
at least share authority. Failure to clarify these roles often renders the
level III care useless, if not harmful.
The meetings of staff coordinators with patients should be frequent,
brief, and as needed, not sit-down “pseudotherapy” (inviting disclosure
of secrets or expression of feelings) sessions. When patients are very an-
gry or frustrated by the case manager’s message or style, they can and
should know who the case manager’s supervisor is and be encouraged to
take up the problem there. This principle of triangulation means that bor-
derline patients who are in institutional treatment should always—or at
least in the early phases of treatment—have an identifiable means of ap-
pealing their case. This prevents splits, diffuses rage, and offers useful
holding and learning opportunities. Within level III or IV programs, the
program administrator can perform this function if there are problems
with a primary clinician or therapist. Similarly, the primary clinician or
therapist can perform this function when there are problems with the
program administrator.
Structure
GROUP MEETINGS
The most important structures of residential/partial hospital/day treat-
ment programs involve group meetings. These can be divided into those
for the entire community and more focused or time-limited types. Com-
munity meetings are for all patients and staff, whereas the group ther-
apies with staff leadership are for patients assigned by virtue of their
problems, and recreational/expressive groups are elective.
mandatory for everyone who is not in seclusion and who has no au-
thorized nonhospital-based activities (e.g., a job interview), and 3)
having meetings led or co-led by the clinician in charge of the unit.
The effectiveness of the long-term inpatient unit at Henderson Hos-
pital in England rested heavily on this form of therapeutic commu-
nity, emphasizing patients as collaborators (Dolan et al. 1997). In level
III programs, the lower level of external containment requires more
staff leadership.
• Group therapies. Membership in a group will be based on whether the
group’s goals have relevance to patients, and thus assignment is not
controlled by the group leaders. These groups should meet three
times a week to allow cohesion and depth. Because of the potential for
borderline patients to overwhelm psychotic patients, it is usually best
not to put the two groups together. All groups in day- or night-care set-
tings require active, directive affect and anxiety-controlling leader-
ship. Good topics for these groups include family issues, vocational
issues, skills of daily living, mentalization or dialectical behavior ther-
apy (DBT) skills training, and the use of social skills training modules
(see Chapter 11).
• Recreational/expressive groups. Participation in these groups is often
elective. They invite borderline patients to be active participants. Rec-
reational outlets, such as exercising, cooking, carpentry, or even at-
tending community events, enhance social skills and encourage the
development of friendships over a common task. The expressive (e.g.,
collage, pottery, dance) groups can enhance self-esteem and offer op-
portunities for symbolic communication of conflicts and hopes. Be-
cause of the emotional expressiveness invited, the leaders of such
activities need to encourage verbalization and to be alert to the poten-
tial loss of control.
learning to contain and verbalize their responses to less support often will
become an indicator that a lower level of care is becoming possible.)
Day treatment (living in the community while receiving structured
treatment 3 or more hours a day for 3–5 days each week) is the usual step-
down from residential (day and night) care. It allows the social rehabili-
tation goals of the day program to continue. Day treatment alone is for
patients who have a reasonable place to live, meaning they are safe from
lethal, self-destructive acts and are able to take care of the basic tasks of
self-care such as eating, sleeping, and responsibly using medications. The
clinical value of a long-term, well-organized day hospital program has im-
pressive empirical support (Sidebar 5–4). Most day treatment programs
are offered for too brief a period to achieve social rehabilitation goals.
Stabilization can be achieved in a matter of weeks, but social learning re-
quires at least a month and usually a minimum of 2–6 months.
Level II:
Intensive Outpatient Care—Behavioral Change
The intensive outpatient level of care is for patients who are able to man-
age some social role, such as some part-time school or work, and who
have adequate room and board. This level of care is still often unavailable
but is proven efficacious and is highly beneficial for many borderline pa-
tients, either as a direct step-down from hospitalization or as a step-up
from outpatient care. DBT involving 5 hours of treatment per week and a
system of coverage that contains crises should be classified as a specific
type of intensive outpatient care (see Chapter 11). It successfully dimin-
ishes hospitalizations. Clinical experience indicates that intensive outpa-
tient care (other than DBT) greatly reduces the need for residential/
partial hospital programs, in much the same way that residential/partial
hospital programs can reduce the need for hospitalizations. The success
of intensive outpatient programs depends on their offering sufficient
holding to counter regressive flights and to support sustained community
living. This holding function is directly related to the degree to which a
patient’s treatment is coordinated via frequent communications between
the clinical team members (Ruiz-Sancho et al. 2001). In the absence of
good, preferably standardized, communications, destructive romances
or rivalries can form between patients who share clinic therapists.
Links (1998) reviewed studies in which patients with personality dis-
orders received a type of intensive outpatient care called assertive commu-
nity treatment (ACT). ACT uses proactive interventions involving visits to
the patient’s place of residence, with a focus on assistance with the tasks
of daily living and in vivo counseling about relationships and work. Only
the original study of ACT by Stein and Test (1980) had a large enough co-
hort of patients with personality disorders (26) to examine their out-
comes. That study showed diminished use of hospitals, better compliance
with treatment, and decreased legal problems. Links concluded that ACT
has considerable promise for more severely impaired BPD patients but
that this model of intensive outpatient care, like the one being described
and advocated in this chapter, awaits empirical testing.
Levels of Care ❘ 131
Vignette
Ms. F was referred for treatment because the small town she lived in had
no psychiatric facilities. Her primary care physician thought that hospi-
talization would provide the containment needed so that she could make
use of medications and psychotherapy—therapies that until then she had
been noncompliant with—and could terminate her bulimic and rageful
behaviors, which were “destroying her family.” During the intake inter-
view, it was apparent that Ms. F was frightened of hospitalization. She pro-
tested that it wasn’t necessary, that she could live with her aunt, and that
the only reason she saw for relocating for treatment was that it could offer
opportunities to become a dancing instructor. It was recommended that
she come to daily self-assessment groups and have an extended psychiat-
ric evaluation. During the next week, it became apparent that she could
responsibly use the program, that instruction in dancing could be ar-
ranged, and that living with her aunt stabilized what was an 8-year pattern
of bulimia.
Goals
Components
Figure 5–2 diagrams the components of level II outpatient services and
the relative lengths of time during which patients participate. Discussion
of these components, except for medications, follows:
Self-assessment groups
Level I:
Outpatient Care—Interpersonal Growth
Outpatient care (level I) is when critically important changes in interper-
sonal and intrapsychic functioning can occur. For most borderline pa-
tients, the first year also involves continued work on significant behavior
problems; however, at the outpatient care level, this continued work takes
134 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Vignette
Ms. G, a 28-year-old single woman, recently lost her job and returned to
live with her mother and stepfather after a year’s absence. She had lost
her job because of absences necessitated by hospitalizations for suicidal
impulses. After the last of these, her hospital psychiatrist had referred her
for aftercare. At intake, she noted that, since returning, she had gotten a
new job, and her suicidality had diminished. She was hesitant to relate
these changes to returning home insofar as she reported long-standing
conflicts with her mother. She also reported that her problems were re-
lated to several romances that “ended badly” because of her “losing her
own identity” (e.g., opinions, interests) and that were followed by a pro-
gressive reluctance to socialize because of fears of rejection. Her ability to
work and her history of nonpromiscuous romances were judged to be
strengths that should be encouraged. It was recommended that Ms. G be-
gin once-weekly psychodynamic therapy and an interpersonal group. She
was encouraged to have her parents read materials about BPD (see Ap-
pendix at the end of this book) to better understand her problems.
The outpatient level of care is the most extended. It is also the most
unpredictable in its expectable duration because the motivation for
change, the vicissitudes of life, and the goals and skill of the outpatient
therapists are so variable. At this level of care, basic personality change is
sometimes possible over a period of years.
Summary
In this chapter, I describe distinctions in the goals, functions, structures,
and lengths of stay for four levels of care that can be appropriate for bor-
derline patients. Most clinical sites do not offer the intermediary levels of
care (III and II) yet are still able to do well for many borderline patients.
Levels of Care ❘ 135
References
Adler G: Borderline Psychopathology and Its Treatment. New York, Jason
Aronson, 1986
Bateman A, Fonagy P: The effectiveness of partial hospitalization in the
treatment of BPD: a randomized controlled trial. Am J Psychiatry
156:1563–1569, 1999
Bateman A, Fonagy P: Treatment of borderline personality disorder with
psychoanalytically oriented partial hospitalization: an 18-month fol-
low-up. Am J Psychiatry 158:36–42, 2001
Dolan B, Warren F, Norton K: Change in borderline symptoms one year
after therapeutic community treatment for severe personality disor-
der. Br J Psychiatry 171:274–279, 1997
Fonagy P, Bateman A: Progress in the treatment of borderline personality
disorder. Br J Psychiatry 188:1–3, 2006
Gunderson JG: Borderline Personality Disorder. Washington, DC, Amer-
ican Psychiatric Press, 1984
Gunderson JG, Gratz KL, Neuhaus EC, et al: Levels of care, in The Amer-
ican Psychiatric Publishing Textbook of Personality Disorders. Ed-
ited by Skodol AE, Bender DS, Oldham J. Washington, DC, American
Psychiatric Publishing, 2005, pp 239–256
Jones M: Social Psychiatry: A Study of Therapeutic Communities. Lon-
don, Tavistock, 1952
136 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
PHARMACOTHERAPY
Clinical Practices
History
The role of psychotropic medications was extremely peripheral to discus-
sions of treatment of borderline personality disorder (BPD) in the 1970s,
when psychoanalytic perspectives predominated. The role of these med-
ications began to be actively explored in the early 1980s as a result of the
existence of standardized criteria and reliable assessments, the medical-
ization of psychiatry, and a growing appreciation for the value of medica-
tions for other disorders. The initial considerations about medications
reflected the question of whether BPD was an atypical form of another
disorder, schizophrenia (see Chapter 2). The issue of whether BPD was
an atypical form of schizophrenia was originally examined by Brinkley et
al. (1979), whose pioneering but noncontrolled account encouraged use
of low-dose neuroleptics. The issue rapidly switched to the boundary of
BPD with depression in response to provocative accounts by Akiskal
(1981), Klein (1975, 1977), and Stone (1979) (Chapter 1). All three of
these psychiatrists had clinical and empirical experiences suggesting that
BPD was an atypical form of depressive disorder that might prove respon-
sive to antidepressant medications. The initial series of controlled studies
investigating these boundaries suggested that the response of BPD to
antipsychotics or antidepressants was not as impressive as would be ex-
pected were BPD an atypical offspring of either of these parent con-
ditions (Cowdry and Gardner 1988; Goldberg et al. 1986; Soloff et al.
1986). These studies did, however, show that both types of medication
can be helpful in BPD and thereby opened up an exciting and still ongo-
ing era of pharmacotherapeutic optimism.
Even as the early projects made it clear that neither traditional anti-
psychotics nor antidepressants offered very strong answers to the ques-
139
140 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
1. Many of the symptoms that are the targets of medications are very de-
pendent on context. As a result, psychiatrists who lack experience
with borderline patients can easily attribute too much benefit to med-
ications (e.g., hospitalized patients whose depression disappears), or
too little (e.g., discharged patients who cut themselves), when pa-
tients’ symptoms are really the product of predictable changes in
their level of care.
2. Medications are used as vehicles for projection. It is very easy for bor-
derline patients to attribute changes in their moods to their medi-
cation. If they feel bad, the medications offer an easily discernible
and less painful explanation than, for example, the patients’ being
rejected. More will be said about this.
3. Medications are rarely, in my experience, dramatic in their effective-
ness. Their effect is almost always partial and modest.
If a borderline patient’s symptoms respond dramatically, by the
patient becoming essentially nonborderline as a result of medica-
tions, the borderline diagnosis was probably mistaken (Sidebar 6–1).
Such experience is illustrated in the vignette following Sidebar 6–1.
Vignette
A 30-year-old obese married woman, with a highly dependent relation-
ship with her husband (she called him four times daily), was given the di-
agnosis of BPD when she began self-mutilating activities. They occurred
in the context of the couple’s having decided, at the husband’s urging, to
apply for adoption. Eight months later, having taken an SSRI, she no
longer met DSM-IV (American Psychiatric Association 1994) criteria for
BPD. Indeed, she had stopped cutting, was working full-time, and had
ceased needing excessive reassurances from her husband. This remission
originally was thought by her psychiatrist to exemplify a medication cure
(like those that can be seen with depression or anxiety disorders). On
closer examination, the patient’s recovery did not actually begin until 4
months after starting the SSRI—too long a delay to assume that the SSRI
accounted for the changes. Moreover, the improvements began shortly af-
ter she and her husband decided to withdraw the adoption application.
Getting Started
An important role of psychopharmacology involves its usefulness in engag-
ing and allying BPD patients and their families in treatment. By first
anchoring BPD psychopathology within medicine and biology, the psy-
chopharmacological approach underscores the “illness” (see Chapters 1,
3, and 13). This approach usefully diminishes unrealistic expectations that
the patient can willfully “get over it.” A survey reported by Waldinger and
Frank (1989b) showed that most borderline patients feel pleased and im-
pressed by the doctors who prescribe medications and that 92% of the psy-
chiatrists or therapists believed that prescribing strengthened the alliance.
Anchoring BPD within medicine and biology also prompts a less defen-
sive, more supportive posture by families regarding treatment (see Chap-
ter 8). Moreover, this approach conveys a proactive and hopeful attitude
about diminishing immediate symptoms that, if not oversold, is always wel-
come and helps establish the relational alliance (Chapter 3) needed for
longer-term goals involving psychological change. However, it is also criti-
cally important to convey to borderline patients and their families the
overall limitations of expectable benefits from medications to set the stage
for appropriate (i.e., multimodal) treatment. The expert consensus guide-
lines for BPD developed by the American Psychiatric Association (2001)
indicated that the “primary treatment of BPD is psychotherapy, comple-
mented by symptom-targeted pharmacotherapy.”
Vignette
A 38-year-old single woman agreed to a trial of citalopram to decrease her
undesirable impulsive and aggressive behaviors. Although she presented
with a variety of impulsive behaviors, her regular participation in sado-
masochistic sexual practices that often led to physical injuries was the mu-
tually agreed-on target for the citalopram “experiment.” We established a
144 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Vignette
Ms. H, a 20-year-old woman with a history of recurrent sexual abuse and of
alcohol abuse, has long-standing and severe anxiety and depression. She
received treatment in the outpatient clinic with Klonopin, which re-
quired escalating dosages over a period of months and led to increasingly
desperate and angry calls that she had run out of the medication and
needed refills. Her psychiatrist feared that this pattern emerged because
she was giving the Klonopin to either her mother or her boyfriend. This
psychiatrist also did not want to undermedicate her real needs. He re-
ferred Ms. H to another psychiatrist, a resident, for psychotherapy. The
patient rapidly formed a strong attachment with the therapist. She began
to talk about breaking up with her drug-abusing boyfriend.
The prescribing psychiatrist now felt more able to set limits on Ms. H’s
requests for refills, and he began to taper her dose of Klonopin to a mod-
est level, which was maintained. At this point, the therapist and psycho-
pharmacologist discussed turning the medication management over to
the therapist. They concluded that doing so would offer more time and
better motivation by Ms. H to investigate the role that the medication plays
in her life. Moreover, they concluded that the patient’s potential anger
about not receiving more Klonopin could be processed within the therapy
without endangering their alliance or having the patient drop out.
whether this rate is higher or lower when the medications are prescribed
by someone who manages only pharmacotherapy (in the arrangement
often called split treatment).
As a practical matter, the issue of medications is often set apart to be
dealt with in the first or last 10–15 minutes of sessions. Obviously, the
need to devote time to this issue should diminish considerably over a pe-
riod of 2–4 months unless problems with compliance or usage persist.
Such persistence may be an indication for splitting the treatment.
Symptom Chasing
Symptom chasing with borderline patients can, at its worst, involve multiple
unsustained medication trials in pursuit of alleviating a patient’s transi-
tory, dramatized symptoms. It results in little relief of the underlying
problems impelling the patient’s complaints and in little learning about
whether medications could be useful. It may further result in a patient
who is chronically overmedicated.
At its best, though, symptom chasing is a reasonable extension of the
pragmatic, empirical approach cited earlier. The prescribing psychiatrist
should be aware that the borderline patient’s needs for medication
change over time. The patient who is overly constricted but intermit-
tently explosive may profit from a regimen different from the one he or
she will need later in treatment, when he or she may be depressed and
fearful of abandonment. Within an even more transient time frame, the
borderline patient who is reentering school may have needs for sleeping
medications or anxiolytics that were previously unnecessary and may be
unnecessary again in a few months. Adjusting medications is good psy-
chopharmacological practice. It is responsive to the patient’s changing
needs, and it sustains an ongoing collaborative alliance (see later in this
chapter, section “Contraindications and Discontinuance”).
About medications I’m ill; meds are needed. Meds are irrelevant.
Meds reduce pain. Meds control mind.
Meds can cure. Meds are addictive,
cause disability.
About prescriber He or she has medical M.D.’s are only
training. interested in illness.
He or she wants to He or she is not
alleviate suffering. interested in me.
He or she will do He or she thinks I have a
everything possible. chronic illness.
I can depend on him or He or she wants to
her. control me.
Transference-Countertransference Issues
Even though psychopharmacologists often try to define a quite narrow
and limited role for themselves as a way to maintain a cool, professional re-
lationship, they too are vulnerable to the same intense countertransfer-
ence responses to borderline patients (Table 6–3) that psychotherapists
are familiar with: being overinvolved in alleviating patients’ pain (i.e., in
“rescuing”) or being overly frustrated by patients’ resistances (i.e., becom-
ing angry). Rescuing is the more common hazard, induced by the “doc-
torly” role of psychopharmacologists. In wanting to alleviate suffering, they
become objects of idealizing transferences. That idealization can further
encourage their wish to be helpful, which further encourages idealization,
which encourages more ambitious, special efforts to help, and so on.
150 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Vignette
A 35-year-old BPD patient gained 75 pounds while taking lithium plus di-
valproex (Depakote), amitriptyline, perphenazine (Trilafon), and fluox-
etine (Prozac). She showed little evidence of improvement, but the
patient was grateful for her psychopharmacologist’s earnest, kindly, re-
sponsive care. Her mother sought out the physician to complain that as a
result of the medications her daughter was increasingly dazed, somnolent,
and short of breath. The psychiatrist recognized that this could be due to
medications but did not believe that he could discontinue any of them
without risking the patient’s increased suicidality. Moreover, the patient al-
ways protested efforts to diminish her regimen. On her way to the ensuing
appointment, the patient fell, was too weak to move, and was eventually
taken to an emergency department. She died of pulmonary emboli.
Vignette
A 26-year-old single woman had started taking paroxetine (Paxil) during
her initial hospitalization 4 years previously. After about 2 years, during
which she had resumed work and tapered her other outpatient care to on-
going group therapy, the dose of 40 mg/day was reduced to 20 mg/day.
She was stable on this dose, but she was increasingly disturbed by how her
taking paroxetine was used by her family as a reason to see her as weak
and to question or discount her judgments. Indeed, she had reason to
think her emotionality and her readiness to discuss problems rendered
her the healthiest member of the family. She wondered, “Could I be nor-
mal?” She wanted to discontinue the medication. With her physician’s
agreement, the dose was lowered to 10 mg/day. She felt more, including
more readily becoming tearful, but her feelings seemed to be appropri-
ately responsive to circumstances. After 2 months, her dose was reduced
from 10 mg to none. In about 10–14 days, her “sadness increased.” She be-
gan to feel empty. Her life seemed to lack substance or value. Feeling des-
perate and like a failure, she renewed a dose of 10 mg/day and began to
notice a change in 4 days. Within a week, she had stopped crying without
good reason, and her work again was a source of personal satisfaction.
Summary
The routine and long-term prescription of multiple psychoactive medica-
tions that are usually of modest and sometimes of uncertain benefit is a re-
ality of current psychiatric practice for borderline patients. Unfortunately,
polypharmacy is sometimes used as a marker of one’s sophistication with
managing such patients. This overvaluation can exist despite the patient’s
likelihood of misuse and potential for long-term dependency. Although it
is not unethical to treat BPD without medications, the widespread impres-
sion about their likely value renders it unwise to treat the disorder without
assessing whether patients can benefit from medications. Once medica-
tions are initiated, it is always wise to consider—and then reconsider—
whether the expected benefits are actually being derived. The evaluation
of medication effectiveness remains tied to the subjective responses of
both patients and clinicians. For this reason, skilled psychopharmacology
requires a psychotherapist’s appreciation of the meanings attached to the
pills as well as those attached to the prescriber. The prescribing psychia-
trist is subject to the same transference-countertransference problems
that beset psychotherapists. A pragmatic, empirical approach, consulta-
tions, cautious optimism, and actively engaging the borderline patient as
a co-investigator set the stage for meaningful trials—and reduced risks.
References
Adelman SA: Pills as transitional objects: a dynamic understanding of the
use of medication in psychotherapy. Psychiatry 48:246–253, 1985
Akiskal HS: Subaffective disorders: dysthymic, cyclothymic, and bipolar II
disorders in the “borderline” realm. Psychiatr Clin North Am 4:25–
46, 1981
154 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
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Chapter 7
PHARMACOTHERAPY
Selection of Medications
1. Anger/impulsivity
2. Affective dyscontrol
3. Cognitive-perceptual dyscontrol
4. Anxiety
Pharmacotherapy Models
Personality disorders are best conceptualized as arising from genetic vul-
nerabilities that become manifest through interactions with exposure to
157
158 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
psychological and social factors during the person’s life course (Paris
2001). Because at least half of the total variance of personality traits is ex-
plained by genetic factors, we can anticipate that neurotransmitter sys-
tems and function will be closely tied to these personality traits (Coccaro
and Kavoussi 2001; Skodol et al. 2002). Therefore, we would predict that
some personality traits will be modifiable in response to pharmacother-
apy interventions. The strongest support of this tenet is the evidence that
central serotonin function is inversely related to impulsivity or aggressive-
ness. This association has been documented with many different re-
search methods and across many different populations (Coccaro and
Kavoussi 2001). However, beyond this one example, specific biological
functions have not been connected to observable personality traits. Cur-
rent pharmacotherapy practices for patients with BPD remain a clinical
art that at best can be based on a reasonable conceptual model.
As noted earlier, we use a symptom-targeted model, but two alterna-
tive models are worth noting:
Anger/Impulsivity
Impulsivity, expressed in actions such as recklessness, bingeing, promiscu-
ity, and impulsive suicide attempts, is a significant problem in patients
with BPD that is sometimes amenable to pharmacological treatment. An-
ger is linked with impulsivity for three reasons: 1) as noted, these symp-
toms are thought to have a common neurobiological base (Coccaro and
Kavoussi 2001); 2) anger often results in impulsive behavior; and 3) many
measures used as outcomes in previous drug studies connect anger and
impulsive dyscontrol (e.g., Coccaro and Kavoussi 1997; Nickel et al. 2004).
Vignette: Anger/Impulsivity
Ms. I appeared in the psychiatric emergency department following her
medical treatment for an overdose of a variety of medications. Ms. I was a
young-looking 48-year-old divorced woman who lived with her adult
daughter. She readily acknowledged that the overdose was impulsively
triggered by an argument with her daughter. Enraged, she went into the
bathroom and ingested a variety of pills from her medicine cabinet. Her
daughter was a witness to this and called the ambulance. The patient’s
chart documented numerous similar presentations and warned that Ms. I
was diagnosed with BPD. When we reached the point of deciding how
160 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
best to help Ms. I, she explicitly told me, “Doctor, I am less impulsive when
I take medication for my borderline personality disorder.” Giving pills to
a woman who impulsively overdoses; did this make any sense?
Mood stabilizers
Carbamazepine ++
Valproate ++
Topiramate ++
Lamotrigine +
Antidepressants
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors ++
Tricyclics −
Monoamine oxidase inhibitors +
Dual-action ?
Antipsychotics
Typical and atypical +
Benzodiazepines −
Note. The information in this table should be considered tentative and is based
on the authors’ synthesis of the literature and clinical experience.
++ =clear improvement; + = modest improvement; −= some worsening; ?= benefits
unknown.
Approaches that require further study for anger and impulsivity are
the use of naltrexone in repetitive self-harm behavior (Links et al. 1998)
and psychostimulants in impulsive borderline patients with residual adult
symptoms of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (Soloff 1998).
Affective Dyscontrol
Affective instability of borderline patients includes dysphoric moods and
other indications of dysregulation of mood, such as volatility and highly
variable mood.
isodes, and during her only period of significant depression in her early
20s, she had never filled the prescription for antidepressants that she had
been given. Ms. J strongly endorsed having affective instability and most
other criteria for BPD. Before leaving the emergency department, she in-
sisted on having medications to stop her erratic emotions.
Ms. J was adamant that her erratic emotions were putting her at risk,
and when this observation was validated, she listened more calmly to
treatment options. Research evidence regarding medications for affec-
tive instability is summarized in Table 7–2. Although little research has
targeted this feature of BPD specifically, Rinne et al. (2002) found that
fluvoxamine significantly improved rapid mood shifts in women with
BPD. Mood stabilizers in these patients, as discussed earlier, seem to have
little effect on ultracircadian or rapidly shifting moods. Antipsychotic
medications have a broad-spectrum action that seems to be helpful dur-
ing short-term crisis management of extremely emotional states. Al-
though further research on affective dyscontrol is needed, some patients
with BPD describe a dampening down of their emotions while taking
SSRI medication.
Depressive symptoms are an important part of the affective instability
seen in BPD patients. The next case vignette discusses management of a
patient whose dysphoria was more of a problem than was variability of
mood.
Mood stabilizers
Carbamazepine +/−
Valproate +/−
Topiramate +/−
Lamotrigine +
Antidepressants
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors ++
Tricyclics +/−
Monoamine oxidase inhibitors +
Dual-action +
Antipsychotics
Typical and atypical +
Benzodiazepines +/−
Note. The information in this table should be considered tentative and is based
on the authors’ synthesis of the literature and clinical experience.
++ =clear improvement; + =modest improvement; +/−= variable improvement or
worsening.
Cognitive-Perceptual Dyscontrol
Cognitive-perceptual symptoms that are common in borderline patients
include depersonalization or derealization, illusions, ideas of reference,
and brief paranoid states. Psychopharmacological trials have not yet tar-
geted or assessed the disturbed cognitive schemas that are thought to
control aspects of borderline psychopathology in major cognitive theo-
ries by Young et al. (2003) or Beck et al. (2004) (see Chapter 11).
166 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Mood stabilizers
Carbamazepine ?
Valproate ?
Topiramate ?
Lamotrigine ?
Antidepressants
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors ?
Tricyclics ?
Monoamine oxidase inhibitors ?
Dual-action ?
Antipsychotics
Typical and atypical ++
Benzodiazepines ?
Note. The information in this table should be considered tentative and is based
on the authors’ synthesis of the literature and clinical experience.
++ =clear improvement; ?= benefits unknown.
ing significant weight gain (Nickel et al. 2007). Ms. L experimented with
the use of low-dose olanzapine and was able to document the reduction
in her frightening dissociative and self-harm episodes. However, the
weight gain with olanzapine was unacceptable. Ms. L eventually decided
that quetiapine provided a better balance between the benefits and side
effects. As shown in Table 7–3, few other medications have been shown to
be effective for the borderline patient’s cognitive-perceptual symptoms.
Had Ms. L been unable to tolerate quetiapine, the next step would have
been to use a low-dose typical antipsychotic with warnings of the potential
risk for extrapyramidal side effects and tardive dyskinesia.
Anxiety
Severe anxiety is extremely common, is often very disabling, and can pro-
mote high-risk behavior in patients with BPD. The typical presentations
of anxiety can be grouped into two subtypes: 1) somatic anxiety, which is
experienced in the body (e.g., through stimulus-seeking behavior and in
168 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Vignette: Anxiety
Mr. M, a 27-year-old gay man, had BPD, comorbid posttraumatic stress
disorder, and a chronic pain syndrome. His disorders caused a variety of
anxiety symptoms, including panic attacks, social anxiety, obsessive rumi-
nations, and disabling avoidant behavior. His avoidance was so extreme
that he seldom left his bedroom, and most of his social interactions were
through his desktop computer. In an attempt to control his anxiety symp-
toms, he had tried many different medications, but the side effects repeat-
edly outweighed any benefits obtained. Mr. M was desperate to “have a
life” and find something he could tolerate that would permit more social-
ization.
Mood stabilizers
Carbamazepine ?
Valproate ?
Topiramate ?
Lamotrigine ?
Antidepressants
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors +
Tricyclics +/–
Monoamine oxidase inhibitors + (somatic)
Dual-action ?
Antipsychotics
Typical and atypical +
Benzodiazepines
Long-acting + (psychic)
Note. The information in this table should be considered tentative and is based
on the authors’ synthesis of the literature and clinical experience.
+= modest improvement; +/− =variable improvement or worsening; ?= benefits
unknown.
Summary
When selecting medications for patients with BPD, several points must be
remembered. First, many of the pharmacological studies have been ham-
pered because of their lack of external validity; most studies were carried
out in volunteers or excluded patients with self-harm, suicidal behavior, and
comorbid substance abuse. As a result, it is hazardous to generalize the find-
ings to typical patients with BPD. Most of the studies were short-lived and
did not inform the use of medications over the longer term. Still lacking are
precise measures of several aspects of borderline psychopathology, such as
affective instability, identity disturbance, and severe dissociative symptoms;
research addressing these outcomes is still in the developmental stages. Fu-
ture studies will need to better inform clinicians about the risks versus ben-
efits and about the effect of medication on functional outcomes.
The current evidence related to pharmacotherapy for BPD is modest
at best (Binks et al. 2006; Nose et al. 2006), and it must be remembered
170 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
that no drug is licensed as indicated for BPD (Herpertz et al. 2007). De-
spite the limitations, conclusions can be made about pharmacotherapy
for patients with BPD. Medication is mainly an adjunct to psychothera-
peutic management; however, some early evidence suggests that combin-
ing medication and specific psychotherapy approaches may be needed in
patients with depression and comorbid BPD, particularly to improve
quality of life and functioning in addition to symptoms (Bellino et al.
2006; Kool et al. 2003). Overall, for patients with BPD, the studies suggest
that medications are mildly to moderately effective for anger and impul-
sivity and modestly effective for depression. The effectiveness of medica-
tion for affective instability, cognitive-perceptual features, and anxiety is
less proven. When choosing medication for one of the four symptom tar-
gets, the clinician should try to anticipate the expected outcome of the
intervention before starting treatment. Will the patient be expected to
show less impulsivity, less suicidal behavior, or perhaps better perfor-
mance at work as a result of the medication?
Although the chapter focuses on pharmacotherapy for aspects of
BPD, if the treating clinician is confident that an Axis I disorder is present
and leading to difficulties for the patient with BPD, then the Axis I diag-
nosis should not be dismissed or ignored. Treatment should be selected
based on the best practices for the Axis I disorder.
Finally, the patient should always be an active collaborator in selecting
the medication, as discussed in Chapter 6. The partnership will ensure
that the patient is empowered to choose, use, continue, and discontinue
medication to best meet his or her personal needs and goals for therapy.
References
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Pharmacotherapy: Selection of Medications ❘ 173
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178 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
History
Efforts to intervene with families of borderline patients were first re-
ported in the 1970s. These seminal reports came from a group of com-
mitted, analytically oriented family therapists. Their approach was based
on psychodynamic and systems theories—theories that are linked in view-
ing psychopathology as resulting from conflictual forces within the des-
ignated patients’ social systems. At its extreme, and consistent with the
influential work by Masterson and Rinsley (1975), this approach meant
that borderline psychopathology could not be expected to be meaning-
fully corrected without changing the borderline person’s primary social
milieu, which for many patients is the family. The initial reports were
based on work done with adolescent samples on specialized, relatively
long-term inpatient units at the National Institute of Mental Health (R.L.
Shapiro et al. 1974; Zinner and Shapiro 1975) and subsequently McLean
Hospital (E. R. Shapiro 1978a, 1978b, 1982). These therapists developed
the theory that pathological forms of parental overinvolvement fostered
the borderline offspring’s dependency and abandonment fears. The
therapists also encouraged hopes that intensive long-term family therapy
could bring about curative changes.
When such theory-based, intensive family therapy was immersed
within containing inpatient services and was closely integrated with other
modalities, it was, in my experience, a powerful approach that could be
very useful. Its confrontational, authoritarian approach was, however, of-
ten resented even by the families who could benefit from it. They were, in
any event, self-selected families who sought out and contracted to under-
take this type of treatment program. It was, moreover, an approach that
was not feasible in most settings and was not desirable to most families if
they believed they could avoid it. Certainly, the approach was never
considered appropriate for fragmented, abused, and nonverbal families
or for those whose interactions with their borderline offspring were
sparse—for example, those living elsewhere.
Family Interventions and Therapies ❘ 179
When studies of families with BPD members moved from the province
of clinical observations to that of empirical studies in the 1980s, radical re-
visions in our understanding of the prototypical family occurred (Gunder-
son and Zanarini 1989; Links 1990). Our early work determined that it was
not true that most of these families were overinvolved and separation-
resistant, as suggested by Masterson’s theory (Masterson 1972; Masterson
and Rinsley 1975; see also Chapter 1) and by the pioneering family ther-
apists noted earlier. Rather, we found that most families of borderline
patients were insufficiently involved with the patients during their early de-
velopment (Frank and Paris 1981; Gunderson et al. 1980; Soloff and Mill-
ward 1983a), and these families either perpetrated or were unavailable to
help with traumatic experiences (Gunderson and Sabo 1993; Links and
van Reekum 1993; Links et al. 1990; Millon 1987; Paris et al. 1994a, 1994b).
Neglect and trauma were prototypical (Gunderson and Zanarini 1989;
Zanarini 1997). Another series of studies showed that borderline patients’
parents themselves had serious psychiatric problems, including substance
abuse, depressions, and even BPD itself (Akiskal et al. 1985; Goldman et al.
1993; Links et al. 1988; Loranger et al. 1982; Pope et al. 1983; Schachnow
et al. 1997; Silverman et al. 1991; Soloff and Millward 1983b; Zanarini et al.
1990). All these studies combined to paint a very bleak and very critical pic-
ture of the health, function, and motivation of borderline patients’ fami-
lies. This perception is reflected in the virtual absence of any new articles
about family therapies during the 1980s or 1990s.
A model for BPD that includes significant heritability and social dys-
function is now superimposed on the conflict model found in the early
psychoanalytic literature. This change has quietly encouraged modifica-
tions in the approach to families (Ruiz-Sancho et al. 2001). While these
changes in understanding the family environments of borderline pa-
tients were occurring, relevant research on treating families with a mem-
ber who has schizophrenia opened up a different treatment perspective.
This research showed that schizophrenic individuals who came from fam-
ilies with high expressed emotion—meaning hostile, critical, and overin-
volved—had far higher relapse rates (50% vs. 14%) over the course of 9–
12 months and that a psychoeducational approach could reduce ex-
pressed emotion (i.e., the putative stressor) and thereby greatly reduce
relapse rates (Goldstein 1995; Leff 1989; McFarlane and Dunne 1991;
McFarlane et al. 1995). Indeed, the effect of these psychoeducational
family interventions on relapse rates exceeded the effects resulting from
the introduction of neuroleptics or from any other type of psychosocial
therapy that has been tested (Gabbard et al. 1997).
The basic principles of the psychoeducational family treatments (Ta-
ble 8–1) used in these studies with families who have schizophrenic off-
180 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
spring are radically different from the principles that guided the earlier
family treatments based on psychodynamic system theory. Yet the ratio-
nale and the efficacy of these psychoeducational family treatments of-
fered a model that could not be ignored by a new generation of clinicians
who now had a more deficit-based construct of BPD.
Vignette
Ms. N, a 23-year-old woman with BPD, came for consultation at the rec-
ommendation of her psychopharmacologist. When I greeted her in the
waiting room, she introduced me to her mother, who was sitting quietly a
few seats away. During the course of the consultation, it became clear that
Ms. N had remained very dependent on her parents, never having sus-
tained a job (“I get too anxious and walk out”) and having had boyfriends
who at times cohabited with her in her family’s house.
After I invited the mother to join us, I began by reviewing the reasons
for the referral and why the borderline diagnosis had been confirmed.
The mother seemed to be familiar with the diagnosis and readily agreed
that “it describes my daughter perfectly.” She went on to talk about how
resistant Ms. N had proved to a long series of therapies beginning when
the mother had started taking her for help when Ms. N was age 13. I said
that Ms. N would seem to be a good candidate for a dialectical behavior
therapy (DBT) group, and we discussed the feasibility of that. Then I gave
them Borderline Personality Disorder: What You Need to Know (see the Appen-
182 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
dix at the end of this book for this and other materials) and invited them
to come back, with the patient’s father if possible, in a week. The mother
quietly, without explanation, said that it wouldn’t be possible. I was a bit
surprised but agreed to meet in 2 weeks. Suddenly, I was aware that this
therapy was unlikely to go smoothly. But why?
In the meeting 2 weeks later, it became clear that the mother had
doubts about the likelihood that any therapy would change her daughter
and that the patient’s father, a silent man who drank heavily, believed that
everything about the mental health field was a waste of money.
Family interventions are often best begun during the crises that lead
to hospitalizations. These crises are times when families often feel most in
need of help—especially during the first few hospitalizations. Efforts to
involve families whose borderline member has already been through
many hospitalizations are less likely to be successful because families have
already established adaptations—and often ones that are not helpful,
such as giving up hope, having exaggerated fears of stigma, or having
convictions about psychiatry’s uselessness.
Problem Identification
Clinicians should actively ask relatives to identify the problems that the
borderline family member has created for them. In our initial survey of
40 families, the most common problems were (in order): 1) communica-
tion, 2) dealing with the hostile or rageful reactions, and 3) fears about
suicide (Gunderson and Lyoo 1997). Once the problems are identified,
clinicians usually can offer assurances that the burden created by these
Family Interventions and Therapies ❘ 185
Psychoeducation
Psychoeducation (see Chapters 3 and 11) involves acquainting relatives
with the borderline diagnosis by going through the diagnostic criteria to-
gether and making sure they are understood. This step is followed by
evaluating how these criteria apply or are reflected in their borderline
relative. When a clinician is asked whether someone has BPD, it is useful
to be able to describe it in a way that is relatively jargon free, allowing lay-
persons to reach their own conclusions about whether the diagnosis fits
(see Chapter 1, section “Misuses of the Borderline Diagnosis”). I make
only modest revisions when talking to parents as opposed to the patients
themselves, as shown here:
Support
It is important to note that borderline patients are very difficult people to
form helpful relationships with—for clinicians as well as for their fami-
lies. Equally important is to empathize with how burdensome such pa-
tients are for a family. In a study that anticipated shifts in the borderline
construct toward a model based more on medical deficits, Schulz et al.
(1985) compared the burden of having a BPD family member with that of
having someone with a chronic medical illness. Both conditions involve
the burdens caused by dependency and unemployment; in addition,
BPD creates the burden of the borderline individual’s behavior problems
(e.g., drunkenness, promiscuity) and the burden of families’ feeling
blamed, directly or by inference, by both the patients and the clinicians,
who have typically excluded families. Clinicians can offer families an ex-
tremely important support by diminishing the families’ feeling that they
have been responsible for causing the illness—or their fear that clinicians
hold them responsible (Sidebar 8–3). Still, the psychoeducation used for
other disorders that has given the reassuring impression that family envi-
ronment has nothing to do with their offspring’s illness is misleading.
tions that will help them to change their ways of communicating and
relating. Workshops in which 10–20 families meet for a half-day to learn
about the diagnosis, share experiences, and hear some hopeful messages
offer an excellent vehicle for consolidating this phase (Berkowitz and
Gunderson 2002).
Single-Family Interventions
Single-family interventions are usually more feasible for clinicians and
more comfortable for parents. It should be emphasized that, as with the
first two phases, conjoint meetings are not yet recommended. Parent
management training, developed by Patterson (1982; Patterson et al.
1992) for treatment of conduct disorder, offers a valuable model. This
training is based on the idea that parent-child interactions may inadvert-
EARLY STAGE
The early stage involves a more intensive schedule (weekly, if possible, for
about 2 months) and more active direction and didactics by the family
therapist–teacher. The leader’s active structuring of sessions deliberately
decreases the emotionality of meetings. It is especially important to rec-
ognize how upsetting it can be for some parents to hear about others’
problems. A disproportionate number of the families who enter therapy
are hypersensitive, rather than callous, to being exposed to feelings of
sadness and anger or signs of conflict. Fonagy (1995) and Fonagy et al.
(1995) have suggested that parental difficulty in recognizing, tolerating,
or expressing feeling is one of the situations that can lead to children’s
developing borderline deficits. The ongoing process of didactic psycho-
education exercises also can ease common anxieties about self-disclosure
or help seeking.
Family guidelines are given (Table 8–3), and leaders actively promote
adherence to them, advising families to keep them on the refrigerator
door or under their pillows. In virtually every group session, leaders make
frequent reference to them during discussions. The effect, beyond the lit-
eral application of guidelines, is to cause parents to stop and think before
reacting.
One guideline referred to often during the early phase concerns self-
harm (guideline 7). This guideline can lead to immediate changes in a
family’s response, which will bring its members relief and diminish both
the opportunities and the need for splitting or secondary gain and for
their sequelae: emergency department or hospital services. Another
guideline that may provide immediate benefits involves severely split pa-
rental roles (guideline 10) (Sidebar 8–4).
During the early phase, a variety of exercises can begin to modify ha-
bitual patterns of interaction with the borderline offspring:
• The book Don’t Shoot the Dog: The New Art of Teaching and Training
(Pryor 1999) can be used to teach parents basic skills in behavioral
conditioning.
• Communications and confrontations exercise. Family members are asked
to role-play the how-to of doing confrontations in prescribed ways.
There are three components: “I feel ...”; “You did ...”; and “I want ...”
Hoffman (1999) used the DBT-based “Dear Man” exercise for similar
purposes.
• Managing criticism exercise. This exercise relates to guideline 6 in Ta-
ble 8–3. It uses some standard behavioral therapy techniques and is re-
inforced by instructive imagery (e.g., using a sponge as a metaphor for
patience and resiliency during confrontations).
• Attributions exercise. This exercise borrows from Fonagy’s (1991,
1995) description of how interactional patterns in childhood have led
to some typical ways in which borderline patients misattribute feelings
or motives to parents and others. Adapted from Fonagy’s concept of
“mentalizing,” this exercise teaches parents to “speak Borderlinese”
(i.e., to develop an awareness of the thoughts, fears, and needs under-
lying their borderline offspring’s words and behaviors). For example,
when people with BPD say they “hate” someone, it usually means that
they feel rejected; when they say they “don’t need anyone,” it means
that they believe being needy is unacceptable. In this manner, parents
learn how to understand and respond more accurately to such typi-
cally all-or-none borderline statements.
MIDDLE STAGE
The frequency of meetings diminishes to every 2 weeks in the middle
stage. At this point, conjoint meetings with the borderline offspring can
begin because the parents should have enough distance, support, humil-
ity, and new understanding not to respond to the inevitable opportunities
to get into heated struggles. Good indicators of the borderline patients’
ability to use the conjoint meetings successfully are that the patients have
an alliance with a primary clinician-therapist or are within a more inten-
sive treatment setting (levels II–IV) where they can process the feelings
evoked by meeting with their parents.
The format in the meetings now deals more exclusively with problem
solving. Families are expected to describe a current situation with the ex-
pectation that other family members and the therapist will offer sug-
gestions about how to respond. The family members of the borderline
Family Interventions and Therapies ❘ 195
LATE STAGE
Existing evidence shows that the family functions better now (Sidebar 8–
5). Conjoint meetings with the borderline member have become more
comfortable; open hostilities are usually bypassed. The problem-solving
format is predictable; family members feel bolder and more confident in
giving feedback to one another. Some have made changes that they take
pride in; others have persistent difficult-to-solve problems that everyone
is familiar with. It helps when the borderline offspring knows that a par-
ent is trying to change, even if he or she fails.
The therapist’s role now is seldom directive; rather, the therapist fa-
cilitates efforts to understand or communicate that family members can
increasingly undertake themselves. Gains made by this time (approxi-
mately 1 year) may lead to termination. Sometimes this is a time when
particularly emotional statements about guilt or angry feelings toward
the borderline family member are voiced. Within the multiple-family
group, this usually evokes much support from others.
The psychoeducational therapist encourages families to make ongo-
ing use of the new skills, move on to psychodynamic therapy if it is indi-
cated, return for added psychoeducational meetings as needed, or join
self-help groups and become proactive advocates for other families with
problems similar to their own (Chapter 13).
Communication ++
Hostilities or conflict +
Criticism +
Independence or control ++
Conflict about +
Separation anxiety +
Feeling overcontrolled +
Emotional overinvolvement ±
Knowledge ++
Burden ++
a++= >1
standard deviation (SD) in desired direction; + = 0.5–1 SD in desired
direction; ± = mixed results.
Family Interventions and Therapies ❘ 197
ate efforts to ease undue guilt. Most borderline patients are grateful for eval-
uations of their children and for any recommendations for assistance.
When the borderline patient is married, a clinician should inform the
spouse about the borderline illness in the hope that supportive allow-
ances will be made for the borderline spouse’s handicaps. The clinician
should simultaneously convey a need to respect and support that border-
line partner’s ongoing strengths. Psychoeducation for the spouse or even
very structured skills enhancement instructions for both partners can be
helpful (Waldo and Harman 1998).
Initial meetings with both borderline patients and their spouses should
assess suitability for couples therapy. The clinician-therapist does not want
to consign the marriage unnecessarily to a future in which caregiver-depen-
dent roles are permanent. However, when such roles are already stably com-
plementary, couples therapy is probably contraindicated (Paris and
Braverman 1995). Couples therapy, like conjoint family therapy, sessions
should not begin until both members are able to listen to what each partner
originally could say about the other only in private and able to listen without
getting enraged, terrified, or despairing (Seeman and Edwards-Evans
1979). For practical purposes, this means that significant change must occur
in the borderline spouse before couples therapy is likely to be of value.
The American Psychiatric Association (2001) practice guidelines pro-
vide the following goals for couples therapy: stabilizing and strengthen-
ing the couple’s relationship, clarifying nonviable relationships, and
educating the spouse of the borderline patient about BPD and its inter-
personal aspects. Couples therapy also can affect the BPD patient’s inter-
personal functioning and may enrich the person’s individual work.
Possible adverse effects of couples therapy that must be considered are
aggravating spousal violence, committing the borderline spouse to the
“sick role,” or resulting in the therapist aligning with one spouse against
the other. To decide whether couples therapy is appropriate for a border-
line patient, the primary clinician can try to fit the couple into the follow-
ing typology (adapted from Links and Stockwell 2001).
Vignette
At the request of my close colleague, Ms. O was seen with her partner of
several months. Although Ms. O had a long history of impulsivity and fre-
quent self-harm, which she relayed in detail during the joint session, my
Family Interventions and Therapies ❘ 199
colleague thought that she had been slightly more stable since her part-
nering with Mr. P. Ms. O was angry with her partner because he would not
make a commitment to their relationship, and he seemed more dedi-
cated to his buddies than to her. She was enraged because he had never
introduced her to his parents and never had the money or time for a va-
cation. During the onslaught, Mr. P sat quietly in his chair, and his silence
allowed Ms. O to rage on.
Toward the end of our session as I attempted to wrap up, Ms. O added,
“I’m afraid of him.” When asked about her fear, Ms. O explained that Mr.
P had pushed her and threatened her on several different occasions.
Given my colleague’s perceptions, I was totally perplexed about what to
do with this couple.
With further individual assessment of the spouses, Ms. O reported an
escalating pattern of interpersonal violence, and her self-harm and im-
pulsivity had continued but was more hidden. During the individual ses-
sions, we directed Ms. O and Mr. P to develop a safety plan for themselves.
Ms. O informed herself of safe homes in her area, and we warned Mr. P
that their escalating conflicts could lead to criminal charges. We pointed
out to the couple that couples therapy was contraindicated; individual
therapy to lower the level of impulsivity was recommended; and if the pat-
tern of escalating violence continued, separation was advised.
Couples with high levels of impulsivity are not good candidates for
couples therapy. Highly impulsive individuals with BPD tend to partner
with impulsive, possibly abusive spouses; for example, the borderline
woman who cohabits with an antisocial man. These couples tend not to
be able to sustain marital relationships. However, when the impulsivity is
moderate or infrequent, a marital relationship can help temper the im-
pulsivity (Quinton et al. 1984). Paris and Braverman (1995) noted that
older caregiving husbands could attenuate borderline psychopathology
in their young wives. But when impulsivity has serious consequences,
such as spousal abuse, or is affecting most aspects of the borderline pa-
tient’s functioning, individual rather than couples therapy is indicated.
Vignette
Mrs. Q, who was receiving treatment for depression and BPD, had a no-
torious reputation as a demanding, entitled patient. In keeping with her
usual presentation, she insisted that her husband accept marital therapy.
The marriage was tumultuous and characterized by many brief separa-
tions. Arguments were frequent, and Mrs. Q would dissolve the conflict by
spending a few days with her elder sister. Two things strengthened the
couple’s commitment to marital therapy: her sister was putting limits on
Mrs. Q’s visits, and their teenage daughter was showing increasing signs of
distress. She was often angry, labile, and prone to feeling victimized. Mr. Q
was aloof and emotionally avoidant but easily recognizable as being tre-
mendously insecure. However, they both came to therapy concerned that
the turmoil was damaging their daughter.
Couples therapy was begun. They were seen weekly until Mr. and Mrs. Q
were able to achieve some relationship stability. Once the couple was more
stable, therapy focused on the interactions that provoked their insecurities
and on their interpersonal skills. For their daughter’s benefit, they pur-
posely worked to lessen the turmoil at home and developed better skills to
work out conflicts. However, once their daughter moved away to college, the
marriage ended with mutual awareness that true intimacy was not possible.
Vignette
Mr. and Mrs. R came for therapy after Mr. R’s release from the hospital fol-
lowing major surgery. Mr. R was exhausted and felt burnt out. Mrs. R was
highly anxious given her husband’s condition. She was being followed up
for recurrent depression and BPD. Despite high levels of tension in the
home, the couple was able to parent six children, co-own a large automo-
tive dealership, and maintain a prominent role in the community. They
were strongly committed to their family, and Mr. R was looking for help to
be able to deal with his wife’s moods.
Couples in which the spouse with BPD is married to someone who has
relative psychological health are best served by a psychoeducational
model. This allows the healthier spouse to stabilize and maintain the re-
lationship. Psychoeducational approaches for family members of border-
line patients, as discussed earlier in the chapter, will be very useful for the
healthy spouse and will potentially prevent the spouse from burning out
before the spouse with BPD is able to change.
Family Interventions and Therapies ❘ 201
Therapeutic Processes
Couples therapy is appropriate for BPD patients who are involved in trou-
bled relationships in which both partners expect to continue into the fu-
ture. Couples with a partner who has BPD often experience a repetitive
cycle of going from crisis, to a sense of security and comfort, to a new crisis.
As noted repeatedly in this book, when borderline patients experience
threats of abandonment or rejection, this generates great anxiety and can
lead to suicidal behavior. However, such crises will quickly dissolve when a
threatened attachment relationship is reestablished or a new holding envi-
ronment is established. This is the first step in couples therapy (Links and
Stockwell 2001, 2002). Such stabilization can lead to dramatic improve-
ment in a short time. Next, the therapist has to strengthen this security and
increase the couple’s feeling of safety. Once the couple is more secure and
engaged in therapy, the therapy explores the precipitants and conse-
quences of their insecurity and how it likely characterizes many of their pre-
vious relationships. Finally, the therapist addresses the skills deficits that
these couples manifest on the basis of the individual and couple assessment.
Summary
The introduction of structured psychoeducational approaches to fami-
lies with a borderline member has been welcomed. Such an approach ac-
tively allies families with treatment goals, builds skills, and, if done well,
improves communication and reduces hostilities with the borderline
family member. The format presented in this chapter seems to work well,
but other formats are feasible and can be expected to evolve along with
the growth of clinical experience and of scientifically based knowledge
about the pathogenic—or ameliorative—role of the family. What is
clearly evident already is that such interventions require only modest
training, are readily exportable, and are very cost-effective. The role of
traditional expressive psychodynamic therapies may still be important,
but these therapies should be initiated selectively, often only after fami-
lies have already benefited from more educational approaches.
References
Akhtar S: Quest for Answers: A Primer for Understanding and Treating
Severe Personality Disorders. Northvale, NJ, Jason Aronson, 1995
Akiskal HS, Chen SE, Davis GC, et al: Borderline: an adjective in search of
a noun. J Clin Psychiatry 46:41–48, 1985
American Psychiatric Association: Practice guidelines for the treatment
of patients with borderline personality disorder. Am J Psychiatry
158(suppl):1–52, 2001
202 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Baker L, Silk KR, Westen D, et al: Malevolence, splitting, and parental rat-
ings by borderlines. J Nerv Ment Dis 180:258–264, 1992
Berkowitz CB, Gunderson JG: Multifamily psychoeducational treatment
of borderline personality disorder, in The Multifamily Group. Edited
by McFarlane WR. London, Oxford University Press, 2002, pp 593–
613
Feldman RB, Guttman HA: Families of borderline patients: literal-
minded parents, borderline parents, and parental protectiveness.
Am J Psychiatry 141:1392–1396, 1984
Fonagy P: Thinking about thinking: some clinical and theoretical consid-
erations in the treatment of a borderline patient. Int J Psychoanal
72(Pt 4):639–656, 1991
Fonagy P: Playing with reality: the development of psychic reality and its
malfunction in borderline personalities. Int J Psychoanal 76(Pt
1):39–44, 1995
Fonagy P, Steele M, Steele H, et al: Attachment, the reflective self, and
borderline states: the predictive specificity of the Adult Attachment
Interview and pathological emotional development, in Attachment
Theory: Social, Developmental, and Clinical Perspective. Edited by
Goldberg S, Muir R, Kerr J. Hillsdale, NJ, Analytic Press, 1995, pp
223–278
Frank H, Paris J: Recollections of family experience in borderline pa-
tients. Arch Gen Psychiatry 38:1031–1034, 1981
Gabbard GO, Lazar SG, Hornberger J, et al: The economic impact of psy-
chotherapy: a review. Am J Psychiatry 154:147–155, 1997
Goldman SJ, D’Angelo EJ, DeMaso DR: Psychopathology in the families
of children and adolescents with borderline personality disorder. Am
J Psychiatry 150:1832–1835, 1993
Goldstein MJ: Psychoeducation and relapse prevention. Int Clin Psycho-
pharmacol 9:59–69, 1995
Gunderson JG, Lyoo IK: Family problems and relationships for adults
with borderline personality disorder. Harv Rev Psychiatry 4:272–278,
1997
Gunderson JG, Sabo AN: The phenomenological and conceptual inter-
face between borderline personality disorder and PTSD. Am J Psychi-
atry 150:19–27, 1993
Gunderson JG, Zanarini MC: Pathogenesis of borderline personality dis-
order, in American Psychiatric Press Review of Psychiatry, Vol 8. Ed-
ited by Tasman A, Hales RE, Frances AJ. Washington, DC, American
Psychiatric Press, 1989, pp 25–48
Gunderson JG, Kerr J, Englund DW: The families of borderlines: a com-
parative study. Arch Gen Psychiatry 37:27–33, 1980
Gunderson JG, Frank AF, Ronningstam EF, et al: Early discontinuance of
borderline patients from psychotherapy. J Nerv Ment Dis 177:38–42,
1989
Family Interventions and Therapies ❘ 203
GROUP THERAPY
Indications
For a variety of reasons, group therapy may be particularly indicated for
patients with BPD. Group therapies offer borderline patients opportuni-
ties to observe their maladaptive interpersonal interactions and to learn
207
208 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
new ones; they may be more accepting of peer feedback than feedback
from the therapist alone; peer pressure can help set limits on impulsive
behavior patterns; and group therapy can help dilute the transference re-
lationship and promote identification with other patients (Munroe-Blum
1992). Even patients who are resistant to attending group therapy often
will find it helpful.
Despite the possible value of group therapy, this therapy does not al-
ways work. In our experience, extremely narcissistic patients who are un-
able to share the spotlight with others and are constantly seeking the time
and attention of the group leaders can have a negative influence. These
patients will be ostracized because of their dismissive and arrogant atti-
tudes to others in the group. Also, patients with comorbid psychotic ill-
nesses such as schizoaffective disorder and major depressive disorder,
with psychotic features, should be referred to such groups only if they
have had an extended period of stability without psychotic symptoms.
Even then, the intense feelings typical of involvement with borderline
group members may exacerbate their psychotic features. Patients with ac-
tive substance abuse problems or severe eating disorders are probably
best serviced by referral to specialized programs until these issues have
been stable for a few months. Although many of these specialized pro-
grams use group therapy and teach relevant skills, substance abuse and
eating disorders have implications for the person’s psychological and
physical health that need to be addressed as priorities. Patients who are at
risk for interpersonal violence when in crisis or are highly intimidating to
others are not good group candidates because those group members who
are survivors of prior trauma will feel too unsafe to be engaged.
Many men with BPD benefit from group therapies, although Black et
al. (2004) suggested that two or more men should be required. Other-
wise, the single male participant can become the recipient of all the neg-
ative projections for all other men in the world.
You should know that you can learn things in groups that you can’t learn
in individual psychotherapy. Specifically, you can learn that others have
similar problems and learn how they cope with them. You can also learn
Group Therapy ❘ 209
how you unknowingly impede making the close relationships that you
want, and you can work in the group on changing those patterns. More-
over, you can learn some things faster in groups than you can in individual
therapy. For example, you can learn to listen when people express feel-
ings you usually can’t stand, and you can learn to understand why people
have those feelings.
❘
Psychoeducation Education Awareness of illness Psychoeducation about
❘
for Emotional Predictability and Problem Solving.
211
aIn Core elements, see Interpersonal relationships for STEPPS.
212 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
STEPPS
Reflecting agreement with the premise of DBT, Blum and colleagues
(2002) at the University of Iowa likewise understood BPD to represent
core difficulties in emotional and behavioral regulation. However, these
investigators wanted to develop an intervention program that would take
Group Therapy ❘ 213
PISA
PISA was developed to serve an inner-city population who often are un-
derhoused, underemployed, and undereducated; stresses client valida-
tion and participation; and is intended to be an adjunct to individual
psychotherapy and to include patients receiving pharmacotherapy. The
group intervention is meant to work in tandem with the participants’ in-
dividual therapy, and therapists are able to attend evening sessions to fa-
miliarize themselves with the group content. Its goals are to decrease the
duration, intensity, and frequency of suicidal behaviors by developing an
awareness of and language for the emotional experiences occurring dur-
ing a crisis. This focus is based on the theory that recurrently suicidal pa-
tients have deficits in their capacity to identify and describe emotions
(i.e., alexithymia; Taylor 2000). This deficit can be established by scoring
higher than 51 on the Toronto Alexithymia Scale (Taylor 2000). The
group involves educational modules, skills related to developing emo-
tional literacy, relationship management skills, and problem-solving
skills. Preliminary data indicated decreases in the Toronto Alexithymia
214 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Scale score over the 20-week intervention, which supports the proposed
mechanism of action (Links et al. 2004).
ABERG
Like STEPPS and PISA, ABERG therapy was developed to be an “eco-
nomically and clinically feasible” intervention in settings where more in-
tensive therapies are not available or an adjunct to individual outpatient
therapy. Gratz and Gunderson (2006) conceptualized the intervention as
helping patients with BPD increase their acceptance of emotions (espe-
cially negative emotions), control their impulsive behaviors, and use
strategies to modulate their emotional responses. The intervention uses
acceptance-based strategies and DBT strategies and also includes sessions
on identifying and choosing actions consistent with the person’s valued
directions. The last weeks of the groups work on identifying and clarify-
ing valued directions. This content highlights the difficulty patients with
BPD have in living their lives in keeping with their personal values. In a
randomized controlled trial, Gratz and Gunderson (2006) found signifi-
cant effect of the group intervention on self-harm, emotional dysregula-
tion, experiential avoidance, and BPD-specific symptoms compared with
treatment as usual. In the study, 42% of participants showed a clinically
significant reduction of self-harm of 75% or greater. The authors need to
carry out larger-scale randomized controlled trials and study the mainte-
nance of gains over longer follow-up periods.
testing, or with limited ability to mentalize. Sidebar 9–1 discusses some ben-
efits and limitations of interpersonal group psychotherapy.
Group Structure
Size
Four members is a useful minimal group size to keep in mind for getting
started. Having four members translates into the likelihood of having
three in attendance, and although starting with only three attendees may
be hard to justify in cost-benefit terms, it has advantages over a long delay
while waiting for enough members who are ready to join. Borderline pa-
tients are always ambivalent about joining groups, and delay can easily
flip the balance toward not starting. Six to eight members is optimal. A
group larger than 10–12 does not permit enough individual activity to
keep everyone engaged.
Length
Meetings are once or twice weekly and last for 1–1.5 hours. Twice a week
offers the group more of a holding function, but this frequency is rarely
feasible because of the ambivalence that typifies most borderline pa-
tients’ motivation for group. Groups should meet in early evenings to di-
minish conflicts with vocational activities.
Duration
Recent evidence suggests that patients with BPD can make substantial
changes in their self-harm behavior (Gratz and Gunderson 2006; Wein-
berg et al. 2006) in a short time. Most of the skills training groups dis-
cussed earlier are no more than 20 weeks in duration, but DBT typically
lasts for 12 months; however, the efficacy of DBT programs of shorter du-
ration is being evaluated. In the PISA program, many patients have ap-
plied to repeat the group therapy because they feel more time is needed
to reach their goals from the group. The STEPPS program allows patients
to repeat the basic program (20 weeks) and also offers patients an ex-
tended program (for 1 year) that reinforces the skills learned and teaches
additional skills such as assertiveness training and goal setting. These
time frames differ from those that are usually beneficial for a more inter-
personally focused group therapy (interpersonal group psychotherapy).
Given that the interpersonal group psychotherapy primary goals are so-
Group Therapy ❘ 217
Leadership
The leaders of groups of patients with BPD should have some general and
some specific attributes. First and foremost, the leader must be comfort-
able and curious about working with these patients. Requiring a clinician to
lead these groups when the clinician is not interested in or comfortable
leading groups for patients with BPD is usually detrimental for everyone.
The group leader should have at least a master’s degree and should be well
trained in the particular approach undertaken. As with other modalities
(e.g., pharmacotherapy, individual therapies, family therapy), prior clinical
experience and especially experience with case management are valuable
assets. The risks of impulsive, self-destructive, or inappropriate (boundary-
violating) relationships are significant even with experience and supervi-
sion. Having experience in conducting groups in either inpatient or resi-
dential settings is the safest way for clinicians to learn about limit setting,
safety assessments, communication with other team members, and other
administrative roles needed to work comfortably as an outpatient group
therapist with borderline patients. Clinicians who have acquired these skills
can combine them comfortably with the usual supportive, interpretive, and
other facilitative functions needed for good group therapy leadership.
(Such learning is also needed to be able to function as a borderline pa-
tient’s primary clinician or therapist; see Chapters 5 and 10.)
218 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Common Problems
Group participation can lead to some challenging problems for patients
with BPD and their therapists. The primary clinician needs to be aware of
these. The following examples describe three common problems (i.e.,
disruptive behaviors, outside-of-group contacts, and silence) and guiding
principles to assist the clinician in their management.
Vignette
Ms. S joined a skills training group because she wanted strategies to cope
with her high levels of impulsivity. She immediately struggled with all the
elements of learning within a group. She could hardly sit still during ses-
sions, she randomly spoke up and interrupted other members, and she
Group Therapy ❘ 219
could not attend to any of the learning materials. Ms. S, other group
members, and the group leaders were all totally exasperated by these be-
haviors. Although her primary clinician initially lobbied hard for her
continued membership in this group, the group leaders and primary cli-
nician eventually concluded that the health of the group took priority.
Ms. S accepted that she needed one-to-one coaching on the skills and gra-
ciously bid the group farewell.
Outside-of-Group Contacts
The patient reports in individual therapy of having outside-of-group con-
tact with a co-patient. She has not yet disclosed this contact to her group.
Principle: Having outside-of-group contacts must be discussed within the group.
The participants must feel safe within the group, and rules regarding
confidentiality, outside-of-group contact, and appropriate behavior must
be reinforced by both the group and the individual therapists.
Vignette
Ms. T told her individual therapists between group sessions that her co-
patient, the quiet and shy Mr. U, showed up unexpectedly at her apart-
220 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
ment door intoxicated. Although Mr. U’s purpose in visiting was to “invite
her to church on Sunday,” Ms. T felt quite threatened and uncomfort-
able. To remove him from her front door, she agreed to have a coffee with
him. But later, she could only extricate herself from the encounter by tak-
ing herself to the hospital emergency department, pleading with Mr. U
that she was in crisis. Her therapist insisted that she needed to discuss this
interaction at her next group session. In the subsequent group sessions,
the outside-of-group contact was discussed openly, and the need to re-
member that everyone has the right to be safe was addressed. Many rele-
vant skills were examined related to the encounter, including how Mr. U
could be more interpersonally effective with a woman whom he liked.
Vignette
The following dialogue transpired in the last few minutes of the thir-
teenth group meeting (13 out of the 20 scheduled sessions):
Ms. V: “I know because of the rules… I have to mention this. Mr. W
and I have been meeting for coffee after group.”
Mr. W: Nods in agreement but is silent.
(Group is silent)
Ms. V: “We have been talking together between meetings and trying to
help each other with our skills.”
(Silence)
Ms. V: “Well, we haven’t just been talking together.. . we have been
sleeping together.”
(Longer silence)
First cotherapist: “I appreciate you sharing this with the group and
keeping to our rules.”
(Silence)
Second cotherapist: “We are just about out of time for today, but
I trust you feel that this is a safe decision for you both. Certainly, I have
noted in the group that you and Mr. W are always in agreement. Maybe we
should give the group time to discuss what’s been raised next week.”
In the postgroup discussion, the cotherapist team was at loggerheads
with each other. One wanted to kick the pair out of the group, whereas
the other thought that they should be commended for keeping to the
rules. Cooler heads finally prevailed, and the cotherapists agreed to stick
to their rules: try to ensure that the group members were safe; that con-
fidentiality was maintained; and that outside-of-group contact, even sex-
ual, be discussed with the group members. Leaving their long debriefing
session, the cotherapists felt united and resolved to control what they
could reasonably control.
The propensity for BPD patients to want to meet outside the group ses-
sions invariably creates tension for the groups and individual therapists.
Group Therapy ❘ 221
In the worst case, borderline patients who meet outside the group de-
velop covert alliances that then exclude others and create an intimidating
team within sessions. In the best case, such outside-of-group socialization
addresses the facts that BPD patients usually have few friends and that the
experience of psychiatric care, especially hospitalization, has added to
their alienation from community-based peers. Because of the potential
value of social networking as an outgrowth of group participation and the
potential harm from a control struggle, it is usually unwise for therapists
explicitly to discourage outside contact. This principle is counter to the
expectations for group therapies that are trying to teach interpersonal ef-
fectiveness; but the principle needs to make accommodations for some of
the unique aspects of borderline patients. Instead, it is best to identify ex-
plicitly how such outside contacts can create group problems (e.g., “It is
very hard to say anything in the group that [you know] someone doesn’t
want to hear if you risk a friendship because of it”). It is realistic and suf-
ficient to expect that group members will identify and be prepared to dis-
cuss any significant contacts they have outside groups.
Silence
The patient reports to her therapist that she has only uttered her name
since starting group. Principle: The primary clinician needs to remember the
goals for advising the patient to join the group and to determine if the resistance is
related to group therapy or the individual therapy.
Vignette
Ms. X continued to attend her group sessions as advised by her individual
therapist, but she had hardly spoken a word over the 3 months. Her indi-
vidual therapist was frustrated with Ms. X’s participation; however, she
had expected that Ms. X would find group therapy very intimidating. The
opportunity for dialogue with the group therapists was already in place,
and the individual therapist made an effort to catch them before Ms. X’s
next group. The group therapists were very encouraged by Ms. X’s in-
volvement with the group. Although she had been almost mute, Ms. X was
very nonverbally involved in the group and often provided the group
lengthy written feedback on her personal diary cards that were completed
between groups.
Ms. X was very quietly participating in the group therapy, and no re-
medial action was necessary. However, a patient can be silent for many dif-
ferent reasons, including active resistance to the initial referral for group
therapy. If this is believed to be the reason, then the primary clinician
should address the issue as a negative transference reaction that must be
dealt with in the individual sessions.
222 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Summary
Group therapies for patients with BPD have moved toward psychoeduca-
tional and skills training groups; however, more traditional interpersonal
group psychotherapy can still be an important adjunct during level I pro-
grams. Skills training groups have shown promise to foster improvement
in the participants’ behavior problems over relatively short interventions.
The primary clinician should encourage and sometimes insist on the pa-
tient’s participation in group therapy, but the clinician needs to be famil-
iar with the group modality to assist in the generalizing of benefits to
outside the group and anticipate certain problems that may arise when
patients with BPD are group participants.
References
Bergmans Y, Links PS: A description of a psychosocial/psychoeduca-
tional intervention for recurrent suicide attempters. Crisis 23:156–
160, 2002
Black DW, Blum N, Pfohl B, et al: The STEPPS Group Treatment Pro-
gram for outpatients with borderline personality disorder. Journal of
Contemporary Psychotherapy 34:193–210, 2004
Blum N, Pfohl B, St. John D, et al: STEPPS: a cognitive-behavioral sys-
tems-based group treatment for outpatients with borderline person-
ality disorder—a preliminary report. Compr Psychiatry 43:301–310,
2002
Dawson D: Therapy of the borderline client, relationship management.
Can J Psychiatry 33:370–374, 1988
Dawson D, MacMillan HL: Relationship Management and the Borderline
Patient. New York, Brunner/Mazel, 1993
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tion regulation group intervention for deliberate self-harm among
women with borderline personality disorder. Behav Ther 37:25–35,
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New Haven, CT, Yale University Press, 1986
Group Therapy ❘ 223
INDIVIDUAL PSYCHOTHERAPIES
Getting Started
Introduction: Prerequisites
Without question, individual psychotherapies have been the cornerstone of
treatments for borderline personality disorder (BPD). One study showed
that more than 90% of BPD patients who received any treatment had indi-
vidual psychotherapy (Bender et al. 2001). In that study, the mean length of
time in BPD patients’ prior psychotherapy was 51 months. Although some
of what these patients called psychotherapy doubtless included what in this
book is referred to as primary clinician functions or case management (see
Chapter 4), Bender and colleagues’ finding is all the more remarkable for
having occurred within a managed care environment, where such lengths
of treatment are discouraged.
Psychotherapy, as used here, refers to a modality that is not primarily
designed to relieve symptoms or diminish self-destructive or otherwise
maladaptive behaviors. Psychotherapy is designed to help patients psy-
chologically change for the better—to alter maladaptive psychological ca-
pacities or to develop new psychological ones. As such, therapies differ
from treatments (such as medication, diet, or hospitalization), which pa-
tients can passively receive or resist but do not require their active collab-
oration. Psychotherapies require shared goals and at least intermittent
collaboration. These requirements that constitute readiness for psycho-
therapy (Table 10–1) often develop out of discussions with someone who
had a case manager or primary clinician role. Establishing sustained col-
laboration (a working alliance) is itself an achievement for many border-
line patients (see Chapter 3). Many problems in psychotherapies with
borderline patients derive from having begun without having first estab-
225
226 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
ation 1980) BPD, who had all received intensive (three or more sessions a
week), psychoanalytically oriented therapies, Stone (personal communi-
cation, April 1999) considered 132 of the patients ideally amenable to this
modality. A disproportionate number of the less amenable were among
the 206 patients who met criteria for BPD. Stone would add serious sub-
stance abuse to Kernberg’s list of poor amenability factors, and like me,
he would emphasize the issue of motivation cited in Table 10–1.
Getting Started
The Problem of Dropouts
A series of studies initiated in the 1980s documented a very high dropout
rate from individual psychotherapies by borderline patients. Skodol et al.
(1983) found that 67% of the borderline patients dropped out of indi-
vidual psychotherapy in 3 months. In the Treatment of Depression Study,
40% of the Cluster B patients dropped out within 16 weeks (Shea et al.
1990).
Several other studies done in McLean Hospital’s research program
have underscored this problem. In a study of 60 borderline patients who
were beginning individual psychotherapies at McLean Hospital (Gun-
derson et al. 1989), we found that 42% dropped out within 6 months.
The most common reasons were 1) too much frustration, 2) lack of fam-
ily support, and 3) logistics (travel, time, costs). As Yeomans et al. (1993)
noted, the rate of dropouts in our study was lower than can reasonably be
expected in outpatient settings because some of our samples were hospi-
talized for all or most of the initial 6 months. It is of note that our health-
ier BPD patients were more likely to stay in psychotherapy if it was started
in outpatient settings (not overly controlled), whereas the more severe
BPD patients were more likely to remain in psychotherapies that were
started during inpatient stays. In another study (Waldinger and Gunder-
son 1984), we surveyed senior and expert therapists who had contributed
to this literature. We discovered a similar pattern. This survey indicated
that in office practice, even the experts have problems keeping border-
line patients engaged in psychotherapies: of 790 borderline patients,
54% continued psychotherapy beyond 6 months, and only one-third
(33%) went on to complete their therapy satisfactorily. These studies
have made it clear that engaging borderline patients in individual psy-
chotherapy is a difficult task and that whatever role individual psycho-
therapies might be able to play, it is likely to be unfulfilled because about
half of the patients will leave before its benefits can be expected. A clear
implication is that before initiating psychotherapy, both a patient and a
therapist should carefully consider their readiness (see Table 10–1).
228 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Contracting Roles
As described in Chapter 3, the earliest (i.e., contractual) form of alliance
involves an agreement between the patient and the clinician about goals
and each person’s respective roles (Table 10–2). Although establishing
goals for therapy has been discussed in Chapter 3, the contracting about
roles discussed here includes agreeing about practical issues such as fees,
scheduling, and frequency of visits; each of these topics is discussed sepa-
Individual Psychotherapies ❘ 229
Bills
Some clinicians in private practice see borderline patients only if they re-
ceive a high fee, justifying this requirement on the basis of the extra dif-
ficulties they expect. High fees may be justified for these patients, but
such fees should be based on expertise. The therapist who is apprehen-
sive about the difficulties expected from borderline patients can justify
the high fees only if he or she uses the money to pay for supervision. Oth-
erwise, these patients should be referred.
Getting the bill paid consistently is often a problem with borderline
patients. It can be hard to distinguish tardy or missing payments that are
based on a patient’s general lack of organization and conscientiousness
from those that are based on anger, denial, or feelings of entitlement.
Skill building through education, reminders, and planning may be help-
ful when payment problems are due to a general lack of responsible func-
tioning. Problems that are an expression of acting out angry or entitled
feelings about the therapy (or life) require interpretation and potentially
limit setting. It is often a useful option to have patients who are delin-
quent about their bill pay at each session so that the issue is very difficult
to overlook. The following vignette examines payment problems.
Vignette
Ms. Y had been in therapy for two sessions per week at a reduced fee for
several years. She rarely paid the bill on time or fully, and eventually her
failure to do this led to suspension of the therapy. As a condition for my
seeing her once weekly, she contracted to pay it off gradually and to bring
her payment to each session. She did this quite satisfactorily for her first
few sessions. I treated this as an expected and unremarkable event. At the
end of the third session, she neglected to pay her bill, and I then took this
up actively on her fourth visit. She was duly apologetic and assured me
that it wouldn’t be an issue. At the end of that session, she inquired about
the amount and then asked for a pen with which to make out her check.
I was aware that by helping her pay the bill, I was extending her session,
but not to do so might have excused her negligence. I told her that I was
sorry that this couldn’t be discussed, but I was sure she could find a pen.
Perhaps this response was acceptable for that session, but I never found a
satisfactory or sustained way to explore her financial irresponsibility.
Eventually, this patient’s unpaid bills elsewhere in her life led to her relo-
cation and termination of therapy.
Individual Psychotherapies ❘ 233
Frequency
Figure 10–1 and Table 10–3 show the relation of the frequency of visits to
therapeutic goals. If the therapeutic relationship is to be sufficient for the
correction of unstable introjects or remission of a pattern of insecure at-
tachments, two or more psychotherapy sessions a week are probably re-
quired, although this conclusion is untested. Both in Kernberg’s TFP
(Kernberg et al. 1989) and in Young et al.’s (2003) SFT, twice-weekly ther-
apies are considered necessary to be capable of effecting structural
change (although TFP’s emphasis is more on the requirements for trans-
ference analysis, and SFT’s emphasis is more on the requirements for the
relationship to be corrective). In my experience, three times a week is
usually preferable, if possible, for these options.
Therapies with a mandate to help patients understand themselves al-
most always require more than once-weekly sessions. The exception to
this general rule is that dynamic therapy once a week is feasible when
therapists see a patient who is “held” by residential or intensive outpatient
services (levels of care II–IV) and later “held” by other outpatient modal-
ities (e.g., family, skills group). If, however, the therapist sees the patient
once weekly in the absence of other modalities, the therapist must pro-
vide the holding functions: must get involved in crisis management,
emergency telephone calls, medications, and other issues of the patient’s
current reality—activities by the therapist that carry great meaning to the
patient but are inadequately examined. This type of “therapy” requires
enough directives, advice, limits, and the like that the therapist’s activities
234 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
involve what is better labeled case management, and the therapist’s role is
what has been identified here (Chapter 4) as that of the primary clinician.
It is misleading to think of such case management activities as psychother-
apeutic, although they can, nonetheless, be very helpful. When a clini-
cian’s role is dominated by these activities, once-weekly sessions are
usually sufficient.
For a twice-weekly outpatient psychodynamic therapy to succeed in
the absence of a second modality, the patient will need to have reasonably
good impulse control and low liability risks. Twice-weekly sessions are suf-
ficient for the holding function, but this frequency often lends itself to
more supportive, current-events–focused therapy when borderline pa-
tients lack significant other supports. Three times a week is more desir-
able with competent therapists for development of themes and for
focusing on the therapeutic relationship. The corrective benefit of devel-
oping a trusting and secure attachment is more likely than with twice-
weekly therapies, no matter how skillfully delivered. Still, in addition to
the problem of financial feasibility, such intensive therapies should be
undertaken only when therapists are appropriately ready (see later in this
chapter, section “Therapists”). For patients, being ready for such therapy
means having adequate social supports and impulse control.
Scheduling
Therapists generally try to do their best to accommodate the scheduling
that patients request. Two caveats here relate to BPD. One is that some-
Individual Psychotherapies ❘ 235
FREQUENCY
(PER WEEK) GOAL
Seating
This discussion assumes that therapy appointments will take place within
a therapist’s office. The general principles about seating are to let the pa-
tient decide where he or she would like to sit but to retain a role as ad-
viser. Of the three standard arrangements—across, convergent, and
236 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Therapists
Qualifications
This book is a testimonial to the complicating consequences of greater
knowledge about treating BPD. Specifically, we know that the therapeutic
tasks and modalities required for patients at the variety of treatment set-
tings and within the current wide range of phases of their improvement
require clinical staff who have specific experience, training, and personal
qualities. Even within the relatively narrower group of therapeutic tasks
that are needed for borderline patients who are ready to undergo indi-
vidual therapy, the factors of experience, training, and personal qualities
still need to be considered (see Fine 1989).
Regrettably, therapists vary considerably in their skill with borderline
patients. Some psychiatrists, many social workers, and most nurses recog-
nize that they “aren’t good for borderline patients” and would happily
avoid them (B. Pfohl, K. Silk, C. Robins, M. Zimmerman, and J. Gunder-
son, “Attitudes Towards Borderline PD: A Survey of 752 Clinicians,” un-
published data, May 1999). However, many mental health professionals
Individual Psychotherapies ❘ 237
believe they are capable with borderline patients but are still not in fact
good for them. This overestimation of oneself is usually based on naiveté
about oneself or about borderline patients, but it is sometimes based on
the appeal (Main 1957) such patients can have for prospective therapists:
the prospect of being very helpful to someone for whom life has been un-
fair and whom others have reportedly failed stimulates heroic fantasies.
Being blind to one’s limits also can be propelled by the very practical
pressures to fill one’s time, whether in private practice or in a clinic. Pfohl
et al.’s study also indicated that mental health professionals with more ad-
ministrative experience in hospital or residential programs had less po-
larized ideas about the borderline patient’s likely responsiveness to
psychotherapies and that psychologists proved distinctly, and quite uni-
formly, more optimistic.
Borderline patients can easily get into psychotherapies with clinicians
whose training or experience is clearly inappropriate for the patients’
therapeutic goals (Figure 10–2). One common example involves clini-
cians with experience and training only in short-term or nonintensive be-
havioral therapies who, often in response to borderline patients’ requests,
escalate the frequency of visits to three or even more times a week. Such in-
tensity invites a regressive dependency, which then cannot be adequately
used for personal growth because of the therapist’s lack of training either
in transference management or in making this availability contingent on
the patient’s improvement. Rather, borderline patients’ dependent hopes
for direction, protection, or nurturance are likely to be enacted in a rela-
tionship with such therapists, who interpret these hopes as needs. Border-
line patients welcome such therapies, but they may conclude that being
sick is the only way their dependent longings will be fulfilled.
Vignette
Ms. Z, a 31-year-old woman, had talent as a writer and was the mother of a
3-year-old daughter. She entered therapy after the second of two hospital-
izations for suicidality, during which it was found that she had been drink-
ing very heavily since being deserted by her husband. She was assigned to
begin therapy with a young female psychiatrist who had graduated from a
dynamically oriented training program, in which she had been recog-
nized for her conscientiousness and supportive attitudes and had special-
ized in treatment of substance abuse. Within a few days after Ms. Z’s
hospitalization, during meetings with her new therapist, Ms. Z had no ev-
idence of depression; indeed, she seemed outgoing and energetic.
Because of Ms. Z’s intellectual curiosity and her wish to get over her
“habit” quickly (and because finances were not an issue), on discharge
from the hospital the therapist agreed to meet with her twice weekly.
Within the first week, Ms. Z called twice with concerns about her depres-
sion (i.e., her sense of “badness”) returning. On the second telephone
238 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
call, this problem gave way to talking about Ms. Z’s daughter’s cough. In
response to Ms. Z’s request, the therapist gave advice about medication,
spelled out the names, and, in an attempt to be helpful, advised the pa-
tient about a pharmacy close to where she lived.
Within a few weeks, a pattern began whereby Ms. Z came three times
a week and called two or three evenings, often regarding the care of her
child. The therapist, becoming resentful about the growing demands on
her time, hesitantly suggested that she would charge for the telephone
time. When the patient got angry (“I thought you really cared,” “If you
want to quit, just say so,” etc.), the therapist responded by dropping the is-
sue. The therapist then felt even more resentful and sought supervision.
Qualities
Some qualities cannot be taught, or untaught. This explains why thera-
pists with very different training and theories can become excellent ther-
apists (Sidebar 10–2). One study (Rosenkrantz and Morrison 1992)
concluded that therapists who are high on “anaclitic, depressive and fu-
sion tendencies” do poorly, whereas those who are “high boundary” ther-
apists function well. In my experience, therapists who do well are usually
reliable, somewhat adventurous, action oriented, self-confident, and
good-humored. Linehan might add “irreverent” to this characterization.
This translates into being active and responsive. Positively unworkable
are therapists who are effete, depressive, anxious, genteel, or controlling.
242 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Engagement
In the first phase of treatment with a borderline patient, the therapist’s
goal should be primarily to engage the patient. How a prospective ther-
apist manages the issues discussed earlier about contracting and estab-
244 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
pect the patient to take the lead can learn from cognitive-behavioral ther-
apists, who have found that a directive, businesslike approach that
purposely does not evoke intense transference is useful in alliance build-
ing (see Chapter 11). The therapist should convey an interest in the psy-
chotherapeutic task and implicitly—sometimes explicitly—offer hope that
the patient is capable of change and capable of having a more satisfactory
future. With these supports, a borderline patient begins to develop both a
realistic hope that change can occur, albeit slowly, and an appreciation of
the therapist’s commitment to him or her as well as to the task.
The basic axiom of dynamic therapies, to let positive transference alone
but to be active about early signs of negative transference, applies to bor-
derline patients. Still, when borderline patients begin treatment with ex-
treme idealization and optimism about therapy or the therapist, these
tendencies should not be mistaken for a sign either that they are commit-
ted to the treatment tasks or that their optimism is connected to expecta-
tion of personal change. Indeed, whenever such idealization and optimism
become evident, I conscientiously and good-naturedly demur—in order to
diminish the risk that the inevitable disillusionment will be too bitter. This
approach is similar in style to what Linehan calls “irreverence” and heeds
Dawson and MacMillan’s (1993) warning about being “too therapeutic”
(see Chapter 4). For patients who begin their treatment with skepticism
and devaluation, this approach should be actively explored. Such attitudes
can be self-fulfilling and often represent a defense against their hopes that
got them to see you. By 6 months, patients should have acquired some hope
that “therapy might help.” This hope can derive primarily from the experi-
ence of the therapist’s involvement or from the therapist’s convictions, or,
often enough, from the actual evidence of change (see Chapter 3).
Borderline patients are very sensitive to whether a prospective thera-
pist seems interested in them. For most borderline patients, lack of inter-
est translates into feeling rejected and unwanted or into feeling “I’m bad”
(Young’s Punitive Parent mode as conceptualized in SFT; this therapy and
its modes are fully described in Chapter 11, section “Schema-Focused
Therapy”). The more fearful about lack of interest the patient is, the
more sensitive to signals of inattention he or she will be. For the border-
line patient, signs of a therapist’s lack of interest are worse even than signs
of being misunderstood. At signs of inattention, some borderline pa-
tients will become silent and withdrawn. Others will become irritated and
say “Pay attention” or “You’re not listening, are you?” or demand “What
are you thinking about?” (Young’s Angry Child mode). These protests are
clear and meaningful requests that therapists should attend to by becom-
ing more active and interactive. Often honest self-disclosure is useful.
Therapists whom borderline patients want to become engaged with are
246 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
resistant to the discipline and constraints required for adherence. SFT has
a theory that combines both behavioral and psychoanalytic concepts. It
may have advantages over TFP because of therapists’ ability to learn and
adhere to it. Still, SFT has not been widely practiced, and it may require a
commitment similar to what Linehan has invested if it will generate a
cadre of devoted teachers and practitioners. A fourth therapy, mentaliza-
tion-based therapy, also bridges cognitive and psychoanalytic concepts. Its
value as an outpatient therapy is currently being tested against a treat-
ment-as-usual condition. Its base in Fonagy’s early developmental obser-
vations is very appealing, but mentalization-based therapy remains
seriously behind the other three therapies in not having established mea-
sures for competence and adherence and in not having been tested out-
side Bateman’s oversight or in comparison to any of the other validated
treatments.
Individual Psychotherapies
TABLE 10–8. Therapist training for borderline personality disorder: empirically validated treatments
TRAINING COMPETENCE ADHERENCE
THERAPY WORKSHOPS ONGOING SUPERVISION SUPERVISOR MEASURE MEASURE
❘ 249
250 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Summary
In this chapter, I have discussed the conditions that can determine
whether psychotherapy with a borderline patient should be initiated and,
if so, what the conditions are that will allow it to succeed. I hope that read-
ers will recognize that, although exceptions to every rule exist, it makes
no sense to ignore probabilities. Clearly, not all borderline patients are
candidates for psychotherapy. Capability and motivation need to be as-
sessed. How the therapy framework is established is of critical impor-
tance, and therapists should have a good understanding of issues of
scheduling, billing, and agreed-on goals to give the venture the best
chance of success. Of particular importance is to recognize how the
framework should be fitted to the patient’s needs and to the capabilities
of both patient and therapist. It is also clear that not everyone can treat
borderline patients well; therapists should consider their capabilities.
Finally, intensive schedules of psychotherapy should be offered only by
qualified professionals.
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Chapter 11
COGNITIVE-BEHAVIORAL
THERAPIES
Dialectical Behavior Therapy and
Cognitive Therapies
Overview
A cognitive-behavioral concept of personality disorders involves pervasive
and inflexible patterns of thought (cognitions), feelings (emotions), and
behavior that are self-perpetuating (i.e., governed by the principles of op-
erant conditioning) and self-reinforcing (i.e., governed by classical condi-
tioning). It does not involve intrapsychic structures, an unconscious, or
paradigmatic self-other units, as does a psychodynamic conceptualization
of personality disorders. This chapter begins with a review of the clinical
applications of cognitive-behavioral therapies for borderline patients that
might help clinicians who are not trained in those concepts.
There has been a notable surge of interest in cognitive-behavioral ap-
proaches to borderline personality disorder (BPD) in recent years, gener-
ated in part by larger trends toward empiricism (cognitive-behavioral
therapies are less inferential and more easily assessed than are dynamic
therapies) and the pressures of a managed care environment to define dis-
crete goals and discrete time frames. Moreover, the pioneering contribu-
tion of a manual-guided BPD-specific behavioral treatment (i.e., dialectical
behavior therapy [DBT]; discussed later in this chapter) has dramatically
energized a whole new generation of cognitive-behavioral therapists.
Other cognitive-behavioral therapies have now been empirically validated,
and we should anticipate continued expansion of this approach.
253
254 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
desirable and thus resistant to change. Yet these reinforcers may not be
evident with borderline patients who resist therapist communications
with other informants. Even if the cognitive-behavioral therapist suspects
that these reinforcers exist, he or she may find the subject difficult to ad-
dress when the borderline patient carries a psychiatric diagnosis as an ex-
planation for his or her disability. Moreover, although borderline
patients might agree to work on making seemingly desirable changes
(e.g., to stop purging or to attend classes), progress will be impeded if the
cognitive-behavioral therapist does not understand the meanings (in
cognitive-behavioral terminology, underlying assumptions or learned associ-
ations) attached to these changes—meanings that often make changes
feel dangerous or undesirable to borderline patients.
Theory
Linehan (1993a) proposed that the core psychopathology of borderline
patients involves a biologically based failure of emotional regulation that has
interacted with what she perceives as a socially pervasive invalidating envi-
ronment. The biological side of Linehan’s biosocial theory echoes theories
that have been prominent in the psychiatric literature since the mid-1970s
(Akiskal 1981; Klein 1977; Stone 1980) and subsequently given scientific
substantiation by Siever and Davis (1991) as a type of psychobiological dis-
position to BPD (see Chapter 1). Linehan differs, however, by positing
that the emotional problems are not anchored in or reflective of what psy-
chiatrists call mood disorders. The social side of her theory picks up on a
theme that is part of the clinical and research literature about BPD fami-
lies. Invalidation reflects 1) the emphasis given to the marked discrepan-
cies between the borderline patients’ perceptions of themselves and their
parents’ perceptions and 2) the lack of communication about these dif-
ferences (Feldman and Guttman 1984; Gunderson and Lyoo 1997; Gun-
derson et al. 1980; Shapiro 1982; D.W. Young and Gunderson 1995).
The emphasis in Linehan’s biosocial theory on emotional dysregula-
tion as the core BPD psychopathology is consistent with the DBT focus on
maladaptive behavioral symptoms (e.g., impulsive and inappropriate ex-
pressions of emotions). This focus accords with the use of DBT for ac-
tively self-injurious patients whose maladaptive behaviors are believed to
function as escapes from or expressions of negative emotions.
groups, milieus, families), the basic DBT package described in this sec-
tion is the one that has had empirical support. The package has three
components: 1) once-weekly psychotherapy with a trained primary clini-
cian or therapist whose work is coordinated with 2) a weekly 2.5-hour
skills training group led by trained coleaders; both of these services are
backed up by 3) telephone consultations with the primary therapist or, if
the therapist is unavailable, by arranged coverage. The point of tele-
phone contact is to prevent emergencies by providing skills coaching and/
or relationship repair. Only as a last resort does the therapist use tele-
phone contact for assessing and managing emergencies. Of note is that a
fourth nonoptional component of DBT does not include patients. A
weekly consultation meeting of the three members of the team is held to
ensure adherence to the procedures and to diminish countertransfer-
ence problems. Thus, each patient is receiving 3.5 or more hours of di-
rect contact (6 hours of therapist time) and an additional 3 hours of
indirect therapist time each week. As has been noted elsewhere (Chapter
4), split treatment (use of multiple therapists) is deeply embedded in the
structure of DBT (i.e., two modalities and coleaders of the skills group
with required coordination of the team). These components offer a very
structured, coordinated type of intensive outpatient program (see Chap-
ter 5) that is intended to be comprehensive. Patients treated within Line-
han’s published research protocols are actively discouraged from using
or relying on other therapies, such as hospitals or medications.
The group therapy component consists of a weekly 2.5-hour social
skills training. The course is composed of four social skills modules: mind-
fulness, emotion regulation, distress tolerance, and interpersonal ef-
fectiveness. A clearly written accompanying manual guides therapist
interventions for each of these modules and provides text (with home-
work) for patients. Much of what DBT groups include has been offered by
preexisting cognitive-behavioral therapies (e.g., contingency manage-
ment, exposure, training in assertiveness or social skills, cognitive schemas
as triggers). In DBT, these components are packaged in an integrated,
learnable way, and they connect nicely with the agenda in the individual
therapy. Most borderline patients find the structured educative format
more useful and less stressful than the more expressive goals of interper-
sonal groups (see Chapter 9).
The individual psychotherapy component of DBT addresses a hierar-
chy of target problems, giving priority to self-destructive behaviors, “ther-
apy-interfering” behaviors, and problems of daily living (see Table 11–1
for first-stage targets).
In accordance with DBT theory that invalidating environments are
pathogenic, the therapist is actively supportive and specifically emphasizes
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapies ❘ 259
Vignette
Clinician (after greeting patient warmly): Let’s start by looking at your di-
ary card. [Therapist reviews the patient’s daily diary to assess suicidality,
self-care, and periods of misery.]
260 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
1. The DBT therapist structures the start of the session by asking to re-
view the patient’s diary card to assess suicidality (priority 1) and ex-
treme emotional experiences. A dynamic therapist more typically
would wait for the patient to identify what she wants to talk about.
2. The DBT therapist then inquires about therapy-interfering behavior
(priority 2): the missed appointment. This might, and should, be pur-
sued in a dynamic therapy too but not as a standardized priority. More-
over, a dynamic therapist would probably make either a more open-
ended inquiry such as “What’s been going on?” or a negative transfer-
ence inquiry such as “Did your absence relate to our past session?”
3. In response to the patient’s saying that she had taken a sleeping pill to
sleep and then had felt “terrible” when she awoke, the DBT therapist
offers an empathic and validating response. Although some dynamic
therapists might do this instinctively, common responses would be to
make further inquiries about the insomnia (e.g., “What was on your
mind?”), the medications (e.g., “Were you reluctant to use the sleep-
ing pills?”), or the feeling bad (e.g., “What did you feel bad about?”).
All of these inquiries would be based on the goal of adding meanings
to the patient’s understanding of these events.
4. When the patient gets irritated, the DBT therapist inquires about the
in-the-moment interaction, with the rationale that the irritation
could, if unattended to, become a problem interfering with therapy
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapies ❘ 261
(priority 2). A good dynamic therapist also would inquire about the
irritability but would view it as potential material for a transference-
countertransference analysis.
5. When the DBT therapist discloses that she is sorry the patient missed
the appointment, she reveals that she wants the patient to come and,
by inference, that their sessions have value. The DBT therapist can be
presumed to have assessed the risk that the response would reinforce
the patient’s absences and to have concluded that it would not. A dy-
namic therapist might be hesitant to make the response because it
forecloses an opportunity to explore how the patient expected the
therapist to feel—that is, to examine transference, or at least the ther-
apeutic relationship.
6. The DBT therapist engages the patient in developing alternative ways
of coping with the problem. The target problem is defined behav-
iorally as the missed appointment, and a functional analysis—the
function served by missing, for example, a good night’s sleep—is un-
derscored. This validates the patient’s need for self-care. A dynamic
therapist would be hesitant to adopt a proactive, “what can be done”
approach, fearing it would enact a parental transference, and the
therapist would not define the problem behaviorally but would see it
as an issue of conflict and motivation. Moreover, an analysis of the
missed appointment would be less likely to begin by the therapist’s
identifying that it served useful functions.
Empirical Support
Basic DBT (the combination of weekly individual and weekly group ses-
sions) has consistently established its ability to diminish patients’ deliber-
ate self-harm and suicidal behaviors and both emergency department
and hospital use significantly more than was observed in similar BPD pa-
tients who received treatment as usual (Linehan et al. 1991, 1993). These
results were confirmed in independent randomized controlled trials by
Turner (2000), Koons et al. (2001), and Verheul et al. (2003). The com-
parison treatment in these trials (treatment as usual) largely consisted of
medication management, intermittent counseling, and hospital emer-
gency services.
In recognition of the weakness of this control condition, Linehan et
al. (2006) subsequently completed a study comparing DBT with individ-
ual therapy that was conducted by experienced and enthusiastic nonbe-
havioral therapists. Results of that study confirmed the superiority of
DBT in the same outcome domains.
Within the health care system, basic DBT represents a particularly co-
herent and empirically validated form of level II, intensive outpatient
262 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
care. As noted in Chapter 5, this level of care offers the minimal and
therefore optimal level of care for actively self-destructive borderline pa-
tients. Among DBT’s contributions are documenting the advantages of
mandatory split treatment (see Chapters 3, 4, and 5), mandating ongoing
supervision, and establishing from the onset that the therapy is for the
purpose of changing (although, dialectically, the need to change is coun-
terbalanced by acceptance of the reasons that patients resist change). No
one before Linehan has been as direct and insistent in offering this chal-
lenge and this hope. It follows that goals need to be established and that
the failure to make progress reflects poorly on the treatment.
Therapists
DBT also has established standards for competence by therapists. The
training considered to be necessary to provide DBT (two 5-day work-
shops) with intervening homework can be obtained through Linehan
herself and several other authorized trainers. Still, Linehan (rightly,
I think) does not feel confident that many therapists, even on comple-
tion of these workshops, can administer high-quality DBT, and she hopes
to develop true credentialing criteria (see Chapter 10, Sidebar 10–1). In
this respect, Linehan would set a new and higher standard. One study in-
dicated that 109 clinicians with diverse experience and training and roles
trained by a state department of mental health could acquire reasonable
intellectual mastering of DBT (Hawkins and Sinha 1998). I suspect that cli-
nicians who have trouble being active, directive problem solvers and
those who are deeply wedded to psychodynamic explorations find it
hardest to adhere to or become competent in DBT. On the contrary, it is
my impression that well-trained cognitive-behavioral therapists who are
experienced in working with BPD patients and temperamentally com-
fortable being active and directive can learn to administer the individual
therapy component of the DBT manual capably, even without the inten-
sive workshops.
Expanding Applications
DBT’s usefulness has been examined in broadening patient groups and
in different treatment settings (Chapman 2006; Koerner and Dimeff
2000; Lynch et al. 2003). DBT has been shown to be effective for BPD pa-
tients with some types of substance use disorder (i.e., both opioid depen-
dence [Linehan et al. 2002] and alcohol abuse [McMain 2004]).
Interestingly, the benefits have not been shown for borderline patients
with other forms of substance use disorder (McMain 2004; Verheul et al.
2003). Whether borderline or not, patients with binge-eating disorder
have shown benefits from modified forms of DBT; in one trial, only 20
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapies ❘ 263
sessions were used (Telch et al. 2001), and in another, only individual
DBT was used (Safer et al. 2001). Modifications of the basic DBT services
not yet subjected to randomized controlled trials are also finding appli-
cations for families (Hoffman 1999; Hoffman and Hooley 1998) and ad-
olescents (Miller et al. 1997) and for both inpatient (level IV) (Bohus et
al. 2000; Springer and Silk 1996) and partial hospital (level III) services
(Simpson et al. 1998). All these applications and others that are in
progress require modifications of the basic DBT package.
The need remains to establish whether, if properly applied in “real-
world settings,” DBT can help reduce suicidal behavior and improve
functioning (i.e., to establish whether it can be a clinically practical and
cost-effective treatment outside academic clinics). To address this issue,
McMain and colleagues at the University of Toronto have undertaken a
large randomized controlled trial involving the cost-effectiveness of DBT
in real-world settings by comparing DBT with consensus-based best prac-
tices therapy (McMain 2004). For this study, McMain and colleagues
adapted the American Psychiatric Association’s (2001) practice guide-
line for the treatment of patients with BPD (Oldham 2005) for a general
hospital psychiatric outpatient setting. This therapy, called general psychi-
atric management, consists of three components: 1) dynamically informed
psychotherapy, 2) case management, and 3) structured algorithmic med-
ication management. This therapy was thought to reflect high-standard
yet “typical” outpatient care provided by a multidisciplinary team associ-
ated with a general hospital psychiatric program. The Toronto study will
test whether DBT’s considerable direct service costs are offset by reduc-
tions in other health service costs. This will be important data to guide
mental health service planners.
Vignette
A patient called her psychodynamic therapist on a Friday evening because
she didn’t “know whether to continue living is worthwhile.” Her therapist
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapies ❘ 265
listened empathically, but after noting the patient’s improved mood and
her turn to more cheerful and prosaic topics, he then indicated that he
needed to go. The patient said, “Oh, I’m sorry. I should have guessed
you’d be busy.” About 15 minutes later, she called her DBT therapist with
the same concerns, and this therapist coached her to use self-soothing
skills.
The following week, the patient and her two therapists met to clarify
their roles. The dynamic therapist proposed that because the patient
seemed to feel better after being listened to by him, she would benefit
from trying to understand why this was so. The patient agreed that being
listened to helped, but she added that being coached by the DBT-trained
therapist was actually more useful. The DBT therapist believed that the
improved coping skills that derived from DBT offered more hope for
change. The patient agreed with the DBT therapist, and they all agreed
that the DBT therapist would have the role of responding to the patient’s
safety concerns in the future.
Limitations
DBT’s endorsement should be qualified by respectful recognition of its
limitations. First, there is a risk that DBT will become prematurely reified
(it has had only modest revision since its inception) and that its advocates
could become a cult organized around special knowledge as opposed to
an incremental advance within a wider mental health culture. A prece-
dent for this can be found within psychoanalysis.
Second, it is important to remember that BPD patients can get better
from other approaches, as dramatically illustrated in more recent longi-
tudinal studies. “Remission” frequently occurred without DBT or any
other coherent BPD-specific treatment (Skodol et al. 2005; Zanarini et al.
2003) and even after short interventions or situational change (Gunder-
son et al. 2003). Improvement of BPD was also evident in the trial in
which DBT had about the same results as did two other forms of manu-
alized therapy (Clarkin et al. 2007; see Chapter 12).
Third, DBT does not work for all BPD patients. Bohus et al. (2000)
showed that a significant fraction of inpatient BPD patients did not get
better. Patient suitability depends on acceptance of the BPD diagnosis
and on wanting to change the emotional, behavioral, interpersonal, and
self-awareness issues to which DBT is specifically addressed. Like most
other psychotherapies, DBT also requires that patients have the intellec-
tual ability to grasp and remember the concepts—a prerequisite that
would be troublesome for patients with learning difficulties. Suitability
for the group component also requires that patients be able to tolerate
sharing attention and listening to others speak of their problems without
getting so disturbed that they leave or become disruptive.
Overview
Because the still growing body of empirical support for DBT already ele-
vates it above other treatment approaches, borderline patients should be
advised to seek this treatment if it is available. DBT has rapidly become
widely used and is sometimes advocated as a standard of care by Linehan
and increasingly (as noted earlier) by managed care companies and state
departments of mental health. As noted in the preceding discussion,
such a policy seems dangerously premature. Finding DBT’s appropriate
place within the larger framework of other mental health services will re-
quire time and more data. Still, DBT’s place in the therapeutic armamen-
tarium for BPD is secure and can be expected to grow. In the process of its
growth, its place within a multimodel context will be clarified, and refer-
rals to it will become more discerning. Linehan and other DBT experts
are examining the process by which change occurs. This perspective will
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapies ❘ 267
help clarify areas of overlap and distinction between DBT and alternative
cognitive and psychodynamic treatments and theories (e.g., Swenson
1989; Westen 1991).
Cognitive Therapies
Cognitive therapy clinicians postulate that borderline patients have dis-
turbed cognitions that 1) develop early in their lives, 2) have maladaptive
consequences, 3) are self-perpetuating, and 4) are, although difficult to
change, the targets for cognitive therapies. The chief difference from be-
havioral therapies is that behavioral therapies focus on behaviors, whereas
cognitive therapies focus on changing dysfunctional cognitive schemas
about oneself and one’s environment. Although the distinction between
cognitive approaches and behavioral approaches seems to disappear
when applications are described, in principle cognitive therapies rest on
the idea that behavioral (including interpersonal) problems are mediated
by disturbed thinking. For example, a deliberate self-destructive action
would be seen as an outgrowth of a disturbed cognitive schema, such as
the view of oneself as bad (Layden et al. 1993). The patient would be
taught to recognize how this schema triggers self-destructive acts. The act
itself would be identified as a decision, and the patient would be encour-
aged to consider options. The act might also warrant directives (e.g.,
“Stop. Consider that it’s not good for you and doesn’t get you what you
want.”). At this point, of course, the cognitive approach deploys behav-
ioral techniques.
Beck and Freeman (1990) stressed three basic disturbed cognitions
held by borderline patients:
Schema-Focused Therapy
Although Jeffrey Young’s schema-focused therapy (SFT) has been in use
and in ongoing development since 1990 (J. E. Young 1994), it has re-
ceived relatively little attention within the BPD treatment literature until
the recent report of a randomized controlled trial that confirmed its ef-
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapies ❘ 269
ficacy (Giesen-Bloo et al. 2006). All the borderline patients did well in
this trial, but those receiving SFT did better than an alternative manual-
ized therapy (i.e., Kernberg’s transference-focused psychotherapy; dis-
cussed in Chapter 12). This randomized controlled trial put SFT firmly
on the map of effective options in treating BPD (Sidebar 11–1).
THEORY
A schema is a pattern imposed on one’s experience to help explain or in-
terpret it. Cognitive schemas develop early in life, and for people with
personality disorders, they are often inflexible and maladaptive. Ten spe-
cific maladaptive cognitive schemas for BPD that overlap with Beck’s have
been proposed by J. E. Young (1990): abandonment and loss, unlovabil-
ity, dependence, subjugation, lack of identification, mistrust, inadequate
self-discipline, fear of losing emotional control, guilt and punishment,
and emotional deprivation. These schemas are evaluated by a question-
naire and then examined to determine what triggers each schema, how it
is maintained, how it is avoided, and what would be an alternative and
more adaptive way of behaving.
In the manual for SFT, J. E. Young et al. (2003) move from these 10
cognitive schemas to describe five “modes” that characterize BPD. Modes
refer to those sets of schemas that are currently active states of mind that
govern a person’s immediate attitudes, responses, and behaviors. Young
developed this concept of modes out of his experience with borderline
patients because “the number of schemas and coping responses they
had—and their continuous shifts between them—was overwhelming”
(J. E. Young et al. 2003, p. 40). In doing this, Young’s concept has notable
similarities to the dynamic alternation between mental states that I have
proposed results from whether a borderline patients feels “held” (see
Chapter 1) and to the “self states” that another cognitive theory, devel-
oped by Ryle (2004), identifies in BPD patients. Ryle’s three self states in-
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapies ❘ 271
BASIC PRACTICES
The Healthy Adult mode is initially and primarily a function served by the
therapist; by instruction and modeling, the therapist encourages the pa-
tient to internalize and grow in the ability to protect and soothe himself
or herself. This process is labeled “reparenting.” Therapists maintain
clear boundaries and set limits, but they are encouraged to reassure pa-
tients about caring, about their not leaving, and about the patients’ in-
herent goodness and to help patients stand up to the punitive parents in
their introjects and histories.
SFT claims to integrate behavioral, dynamic, attachment, and Gestalt
models. Therapists are quite active and interactive. They encourage pa-
tients to express needs and emotions (leave the Detached Protector mode);
learn coping skills; read written materials (by Young) about their sche-
mas; develop flash cards; actively play-act dialogues between modes or
with the therapist taking on one of the modes; and close their eyes, visu-
alize, and describe difficult experiences, including, eventually, trauma.
Altogether, SFT is an inventive, structured, and highly involving ther-
apy. The manual contains clear and clinically compelling characteriza-
tions of the borderline patients’ experiences. Suicidality and deliberate
self-harm are expected to diminish within 6 months, punitive introjects
are expected to soften by 1 year, and a capacity to sustain close relation-
ships can be expected by 3 years.
CAVEATS
Still, SFT prompts some questions. First, like DBT, SFT has its own con-
cepts and language, which, although understandable, may require con-
siderable immersion for therapists or patients to acquire the necessary
comfort and commitment levels. Again, like DBT, the therapy’s develop-
ers wrote as if they were unfamiliar with or disregarded the very extensive
prior literature about psychotherapies with borderline patients. Little ef-
fort was made to identify the considerable overlaps with prior contribu-
272 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
tions. Thus, the required immersion within SFT’s new concepts and
language may lend itself to cultism. Second, the explicit “reparenting”
function of therapists could encourage regressive transference enact-
ments. This danger is heightened by the apparent uncritical acceptance
of patients’ devaluative attitudes toward their actual parents and by the
lack of any family contacts or involvement during SFT.
OVERVIEW
SFT has emerged as a promising form of individual psychotherapy for
borderline patients. It has a vivid and understandable conceptualization
of borderline psychopathology, and it has proved to be teachable. Repli-
cation studies of its efficacy and further explication of its principles and
techniques are needed and will certainly be welcome.
rival of SFT is one indication of this synthesis, but other cognitive thera-
pies are also gaining a foothold. Notably, Anthony Ryle, a British
psychologist, has been developing a “cognitive analytic theory and ther-
apy.” Another cognitive approach, Systems Training for Emotional Pre-
dictability and Problem Solving, was described in Chapter 9. In the
following subsection, I describe another promising cognitive therapy
with preliminary empirical support.
for the entire six sessions. Notably, in the two British trials, the therapists’
motivation and competence were highly variable, and, remarkably, more
than half of the patients attended fewer than three sessions before drop-
ping out. In any event, these preliminary McMACT studies indicated that
this short-term intervention may yet prove valuable when therapists and
patients are selected appropriately.
The results of these trials combined with the evidence from longitu-
dinal research showing that BPD can remit quite quickly (Gunderson et
al. 2003) serve notice that focused short-term interventions may have a
more significant role in treating BPD than had ever been expected.
Summary
Cognitive-behavioral approaches to the care of borderline patients have
moved from the background of modalities into the foreground. The re-
markable empirical substantiation for DBT has excited a new cadre of en-
thusiastic clinicians, a public health debate about reimbursement, a new
standard for assessing competence, and a new intellectual ferment about
mechanisms of therapeutic action within therapies. DBT is now joined by
Young’s SFT, which also has received promising empirical validation. In
this chapter, I have attempted to place these treatments into their context
alongside other modalities and within the history of treatment develop-
ments for BPD. Other cognitive therapies that are less ambitious, but
more easily exportable, are in the process of being developed.
References
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Akiskal HS: Subaffective disorders: dysthymic, cyclothymic and bipolar II
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46, 1981
American Psychiatric Association: Practice guideline for the treatment of
patients with borderline personality disorder. Am J Psychiatry 158
(10 suppl):1–52, 2001
Arntz A, Klokman J, Sieswerda S: An experimental test of the schema
mode model of borderline personality disorder. J Behav Ther Exp
Psychiatry 36:226–239, 2005
Beck AT, Freeman AM: Cognitive Therapy of Personality Disorders. New
York, Guilford, 1990
Beck AT, Freeman A, Davis DD, et al: Cognitive Therapy of Personality
Disorders. New York, Guilford, 2004
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Psychiatr Ann 2:133–139, 2007
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapies ❘ 275
PSYCHODYNAMIC
PSYCHOTHERAPIES
279
280 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Pre-Empirical Developments
In the 1970s and early 1980s, many conferences were held featuring ex-
pert psychoanalytic therapists who detailed competing theories and tech-
niques that they believed were most effective. During this period, the
enthusiasm for the value of psychoanalytic therapies with borderline pa-
tients was at its peak. In a thoughtful commentary, Aronson (1985)
pointed out that the authors responsible for this peak were all narrowly
analytic and rarely focused on issues of diagnosis, attrition, treatment fail-
ure, or limitations of their model.
No debate captured more attention than those featuring Kernberg
and Kohut/Adler (Sidebar 12–1 and Table 12–1).
Against the backdrop of the debate between the Kernbergian and Ko-
hutian/Adlerian models, several experts wrote accounts about psychody-
namic psychotherapies that were more pragmatic and eschewed either
theoretical pole (e.g., Benjamin 1993; Gabbard and Wilkinson 1994; Gun-
derson 1984, 1996; Kroll 1988; McGlashan 1993; Paris 1998; Stone 1990,
1993). My own experience indicated that there were often distinctions in
the use of each model: the supportive techniques advocated by Adler are
needed early in therapy, are crucial for therapies done with support from
other modalities, and are the techniques essential for making borderline
patients feel cared for and become attached (in a relational alliance). It
also seemed apparent that the interpretations advocated by Kernberg can
be essential for managing early negative transferences, that they become
increasingly valuable over time, and that, as noted by Kernberg, they are
crucial to helping borderline patients recognize and own unacknowl-
282 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
tive study had severe personality disorders. In the study design, patients
were assigned to receive psychoanalytic, expressive (i.e., investigative, in-
sight oriented, emotion generating), or supportive (i.e., directive, defense
reinforcing, emotion inhibiting) forms of psychotherapy. Hospitalization
was a concurrent context for most patients in the course of the treatments.
Horwitz (1982) examined the outcomes of a subgroup of 16 patients
of the original 42 who might qualify for a diagnosis of borderline person-
ality (see Table 12–2). Of these 16 patients, 5 were considered successes,
5 were considered unchanged, and 6 were thought to have become
worse. The type of treatment the subgroup sample received was divided
equally between psychoanalysis and psychotherapy. All 6 borderline pa-
tients who had received psychoanalysis alone got worse. Two patients who
received expressive therapy did well, but they were considered to have
higher baseline levels of ego strength. All 5 of the successful outcomes oc-
curred in patients who had received supportive-expressive psychother-
apy. Nevertheless, 4 of these 5 still had evidence of primary-process
thinking on psychological tests conducted at the follow-up evaluation.
This study remains the most significant evidence that psychoanalysis per
se is contraindicated for borderline patients.
Still, borderline patients who have attained internal controls and sta-
ble role functioning may want to deepen their therapy and, in effect, ex-
pand their object relatedness by learning to examine the increased
frustrations and projections that are invited by going on the couch. If
they have achieved these capabilities, they are by then, arguably, no
longer borderline. In my limited experience, such patients can then go
on to achieve considerable further growth, but it becomes impossible to
sort out the effects of aging (i.e., BPD’s natural course).
A second set of studies from McLean Hospital in the 1980s was
prompted by the question whether it would be possible to evaluate the ef-
ficacy of psychoanalytic therapy through controlled outcome research.
Drawing on lessons learned from a previous experience in conducting
such a study with schizophrenia subjects (Gunderson et al. 1984; Stanton
et al. 1984), we were determined as a first step to document that major
structural benefits occur from psychoanalytic psychotherapy and to
establish reasonable estimates of how often such benefits last and how
long such benefits take to occur. As noted in Chapter 10 of this book,
Waldinger and I found that even expert, published psychoanalytic ther-
apists frequently had high rate of dropouts and rarely (10%) judged their
therapies with borderline patients to have ended successfully (Waldinger
and Gunderson 1984).
The second approach took place at McLean, where many therapists,
like those in the Menninger study, had been practicing intensive long-term
284
TABLE 12–2. Summary of outcome studies
❘
Menninger Psychotherapy N =16 who met criteria for BPO Assigned to receive psychoanalysis (n=6) M.D. and Ph.D.
McLean Psychotherapy N =60 hospitalized patients “Psychodynamic” without M.D.’s and Ph.D.’s
Engagement Project meeting DIB/DSM criteria for standardization of technique, theory, of varying
(Gunderson et al. 1989, BPD; all were starting a new or intensity; most were seen once experience,
1997; Najavits and psychotherapy weekly including trainees
Gunderson 1995).
Northwestern University N =23 outpatient “borderline- Unstandardized, “generic”; most Unstated, many
Department of Psychology psychotic” subjects from patients seen ≤ once weekly by
(Howard et al. 1986) various study samples trainees
New South Wales N =30 outpatients meeting Standardized, “self psychological” with M.D. and Ph.D.
(Stevenson and Meares DSM-IV criteria for BPD intensive supervision; frequency was trainees
1992, 1999; Meares et al. twice weekly
1999).
Note. BPD= borderline personality disorder; BPO=borderline personality organization; DIB = Diagnostic Interview for Borderline Patients;
DSM-IV=Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th Edition (American Psychiatric Association 1994).
Psychodynamic Psychotherapies ❘ 285
therapies for many years. When McLean staff were invited to identify cases
that they thought had gone on to curative changes, surprisingly few could
do so. Five cases were subsequently detailed in case reports (Waldinger
and Gunderson 1989). This study showed that borderline patients could
undergo curative changes in long-term therapies (4–7 years). Given this
duration of treatment, and in the light of current knowledge about the un-
expectedly good course of BPD, it is not possible to safely infer that the cur-
ative changes were due to the therapies. In any event, the more instructive
finding was to discover how rarely such curative changes occur.
The third part of this investigation was a naturalistic prospective study
with unselected therapists of variable experience. This study confirmed
that dropouts were common (Gunderson et al. 1989) and that there was
an overall variability in outcomes (Najavits and Gunderson 1995; Sabo et
al. 1995). As a result of these studies, we concluded that even with senior,
experienced therapists, major successes were unusual and took many
years and that, without being able to identify what qualities of therapist
and borderline patient made effectiveness possible, controlled outcome
research on psychoanalytic therapy with borderline patients was not yet
feasible.
A third outcome study was reported by Howard et al. (1986) as part of
a meta-analysis in which an overall relation between number of sessions
and successful outcome was documented. A smaller sample at their own
clinic, 23 patients grouped as “borderline-psychotic,” required a signifi-
cantly greater number of sessions to achieve improvement than did pa-
tients who were depressed or anxious. In what was usually once-weekly
therapies, about half of the “borderline-psychotic” sample who remained
in therapy “had improved” by 6 months, about 75% by 1 year, and nearly
90% by 2 years. Although this study had a nonstandardized threshold for
improvement and did not identify what percentage of patients discontin-
ued therapy because they were not improving, the seemingly impressive
rate of improvement now seems less surprising in view of the natural
course of this disorder.
The fourth outcome study came from New South Wales, Australia.
Stevenson and Meares (1992, 1999) conducted a naturalistic prospective
study of the effectiveness of psychodynamic psychotherapy. The thera-
pies were conducted twice weekly by young trainees who received exten-
sive supervision. The 30 borderline patients received 12 months of
therapy, during which only 16% dropped out after testifying to a very suc-
cessful engagement process (Meares et al. 1999). At the 1-year follow-up,
these patients had a significant decline in hospital use; in episodes of self-
harm (from 3.77 per year to 0.83 per year); and in the mean number of
DSM-IV (American Psychiatric Association 1994) BPD criteria, with 9 pa-
286 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
tients (30%) below the threshold for BPD diagnosis. Again, these results
might appear remarkably positive, and they were significantly better than
a waiting-list control group (Meares et al. 1999), but the results appear far
less impressive given current knowledge about the natural course of BPD
(Skodol et al. 2005; Zanarini et al. 2005).
Transference-Focused Psychotherapy
Psychodynamic or psychoanalytic therapies with borderline patients have
been the target of growing criticism and skepticism since dialectical behav-
ior therapy (DBT) emerged with empirical validation in the early 1990s
(Sidebar 12–2). Nowhere was this more evident than for Kernberg’s model
of transference-focused psychotherapy (TFP)—a model introduced by a
psychoanalytic leader and already controversial within that community.
The heroic efforts required to manualize TFP deserve note. The effort be-
gan with the still theory-laden and clinically rich draft of a manual pub-
lished by Kernberg and colleagues (1989). The draft then underwent
considerable further development, giving way over the next 15 years to a se-
ries of increasingly pragmatic, specific, and operationalized versions (Clar-
kin et al. 1999, 2006; Koenigsberg et al. 2000; Yeomans et al. 2002). This
effort was led by Clarkin, a distinguished psychotherapy researcher. Perhaps
pushed by the example set by Linehan for DBT (see Table 11–1), TFP also
has now identified a hierarchy of treatment goals. As shown in Table 12–3,
like DBT, TFP’s hierarchy begins by addressing suicidal threats—also in-
cluding violent behaviors—and then moves to other treatment-interfering
behaviors. As a result of this manualization of TFP, this form of psychoana-
lytic psychotherapy became uniquely capable of having its efficacy tested.
With the overall similarity of the outcomes from all three treatments
in mind, one distinction is being assigned much significance: patients
who received TFP scored higher on measures of reflectiveness and coher-
ence. Both variables are scored from the Adult Attachment Interview,
and reflectiveness is thought to be a proxy for Fonagy’s concept of men-
talization (see Chapter 1, Sidebar 1–4). This finding could be important
insofar as it provides some evidence of specificity for the claim that psy-
choanalytic therapies offer deeper changes in the ways people think. It is
thought that improved mentalization (more accurate at complex assess-
ments of self and others) is the mechanism for change in symptoms and
behaviors.
290
(BPD)
PHASE
❘
1: GETTING STARTED 2: RELATIONAL ALLIANCE 3: POSITIVE DEPENDENCY 4: SECURE ATTACHMENT
Therapeutic Contractual alliance Relational alliance Relational alliance Working alliance Secure
relationship Agreed-upon goals Therapist valued Therapy valued Separation anxiety attachment
and roles Dependent/anxious Dependent/positive
Counterdependent
Major issues Action, symptoms, Affect recognition and Misattribution, Negative transference Internal locus
fearfulness tolerance assertiveness Reentering competition of control
Anger and denial of Accepting neediness Fear of aggression Developmental issues
anger Anger projected Anger projected Trauma, self-image
Projection
Therapist Interactive Clarifies maladaptive Identifies conflicts and Interprets conflicts N/A
activities Responsive responses to feelings misattributions and transference
Educates and clarifies (e.g., frustration) Supports functional Confronts avoidance
Validates and empathizes capabilities
Develops formulation Connects present to past
Outcome Patient likes and is Capable of low-demand Capable of low-demand Capable of competi- Patient does
engaged by therapist social role relationships tion, friendships not have BPD
Psychodynamic Psychotherapies ❘ 291
better mentalization capacities (Fonagy 1991, 1995; Fonagy et al. 1995): learn-
ing to represent feelings and affects in one’s mind without action. It also
presages a very important, recurrent thematic process in long-term therapies
whereby borderline patients connect behaviors to events, to feelings, and to
their thoughts.
Validation involves actively reinforcing the reality of borderline pa-
tients’ perceptions and identifying the adaptive functions served by their
defenses and behaviors. Of particular delicacy is the balance between lis-
tening sympathetically to disclosures of past mistreatment and, while val-
idating the experience of unfairness, not assuming the validity of the
realities as described (Gunderson and Chu 1994). This balance can be
difficult, either because the natural impulse is to convey support or be-
cause the borderline patient so clearly wants you to. It is usually sufficient
to convey that the patient’s life sounds as if it were awful and that you can
understand why, under such circumstances, he or she behaves as he or
she characteristically does. Although these processes of empathic iden-
tification of feelings, validating their significance, and tracing their
connections to events and actions have been given a developmental per-
spective by Fonagy’s observations, the same interventions also arose as
central processes within the cognitive-behavioral therapies of Linehan
(1993, 1997) and Young (1990; Young et al. 2003) on the basis of only
their clinical experiences.
Being liked occurs early (see Chapter 10) and is of value, but prima-
rily because it helps create the engagement needed for a relational alli-
ance. The valuation of a therapist is most directly a result of the therapist’s
empathy and validation. These activities make the therapist what is
termed a good object. But valuing therapy derives from learning experience.
Interpretations or confrontations that bring to the patient’s attention
problems in himself or herself are activities that risk the therapist’s be-
coming a bad object. Still, by 3–6 months, the value of the tasks in therapy
should be evident in patients’ reports that they have learned new things
about themselves (Gunderson et al. 1997). Indeed, I like to underscore
the therapy’s task, understanding oneself, from the very first session by
making observations about a patient and inquiring about whether he or
she has learned anything new.
Empirical data that help identify key therapeutic processes are avail-
able from the MPRP. As noted earlier, this study distinguished between two
types of psychotherapy: expressive (i.e., investigative, insight oriented,
emotion generating) and supportive (i.e., directive, defense reinforcing,
emotion inhibiting). The original interpretation by Kernberg et al.
(1972), buttressed by Guttman’s formidable statistical techniques, was that
the data indicated that expressive techniques and processes were effective.
294 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
The following vignette illustrates some of the processes that typify this
phase of therapy, when the relational alliance is being built alongside a
task orientation. This material illustrates my efforts to convert the mean-
ing of depressive symptoms into maladaptive defensive phenomena—
that is, convert the patient’s depression into a meaningful communica-
tion of needs and fears. I use it also to introduce how a concept of mental
deficits can link symptoms to meanings and how therapy can be transfor-
mative.
Vignette
Ms. AA was 6 months into her thrice-weekly psychotherapy. She had
started as an inpatient, moved through 3 months of partial hospital, and
now was an outpatient. She appeared looking pale and thin, walked slowly
to her chair, seemed distracted, and didn’t look at me.
Therapist: You look depressed. [a comment about a feeling]
Ms. AA: I am.
Therapist: What’s going on.... how do you understand this? [a ques-
tion]
Ms. AA: I don’t.
Therapist: I’m surprised you don’t relate it to what we talked about
last time (i.e., having started work).... [a linking comment that creates a
coherent narrative]
(Silence)
Therapist: Then, do you relate becoming depressed to starting work?
[a question]
Ms. AA: No.
Therapist: [now I question her response to therapy, to me]: Does that
mean that you think what I’ve been pointing out, interpreting, and even
predicting about your depression isn’t correct? [I’ve been saying since we
started that every time she takes a step toward more responsibility and less
patient care, it represents a big threat to her and impels her to seek more
supports.]
Ms. AA (irritably interrupting): Yes, I know (rolls eyes disdainfully),
every step forward will be followed by 10 backward. I think that’s just your
theory.
Therapist: That theory helps explain why you’re depressed: why tak-
ing a step—not a little one, by the way [here I provide validation]—like
your new job would predictably cause you to feel deprived and feel in
need of more help. Unfortunately, to my mind, by becoming dysfunc-
tional, you may evoke caring responses that you could otherwise attain
more readily than you believe.
therapist, who must help patients accept that their wish for caring atten-
tion is understandable and acceptable and that having those wishes frus-
trated prompts many of their behavior problems. Although this issue
sounds like transference analysis, it is usually first identified in situations
outside the therapy: for example, “I knew that when your mother went on
vacation you were likely to start drinking” or “When you leave the halfway
house, as much as you hate it, it is going to represent a big loss for you.”
Such interpretations of meanings assigned to events by borderline pa-
tients underscore the therapist’s role as an interested observer.
Other interpretations involve the defensive role of behaviors: for ex-
ample, “You know when you yell that your husband will comply” or “Tak-
ing these drugs prevents you from feeling weak.” Again, these are not
transference interpretations; they are designed to increase self-awareness,
and in the process, they help patients to appreciate the therapist’s ability
to make their life more understandable. The primary use of transference
interpretations involves the borderline patients’ subtle or indirect expres-
sions of hostility. Hostilities can become endemic if not addressed, but
hostility needs to be identified in a natural, instructive way, without imply-
ing that the patient has offended or scared the therapist—rather, the ther-
apist can invite a more direct expression.
When interpretations are met by hostility, the patient’s feelings need
to be respected, but a therapist ought not to be apologetic; making ob-
servations is essential to a therapist’s ability to be helpful. Indeed, I offer
patients such observations in a psychoeducational way and buttress my
observations by citing how well known and familiar such patterns of re-
sponse are. In this way, the interpretation becomes neutralized. In much
this same way, I believe Benjamin (1993) combines education with dy-
namic formulation, and Young et al. (2003) actually includes written
summaries of patients’ alternative modes (see Chapter 11).
Obviously, the belief held by many borderline patients that “psycho-
therapy might help” after 6 months is enhanced by advances made both in
the relational alliance and by any actual learning that has taken place. Al-
though the former is essential, it should never be considered sufficient. By
the end of 1 year, the patient should be involved in therapy and attached to
the therapist (see Table 12–4). This is another sign that the patient has
fully achieved the goal of a relational (affective and empathic) alliance.
Continued involvement and investment by the therapist—as shown by
reliability, interest, and good judgment—evokes hope about the relation-
ship that, in the first phase of treatment, is often experienced as dangerous
vulnerability (“I’ll get hurt, rejected,” etc.). Still, most borderline patients
consciously entertain the idea, some if not most of the time, that “this ther-
apist cares.” This idea only gradually becomes a conviction after actual ex-
298 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
The conclusion of phase 3 can occur as early as the end of the second
year of therapy and usually occurs within year 3. At this point, the border-
line patient has acquired a capacity for stable, supportive relationships
and a capacity for stable, low-demand work (see Table 12–4). At this
point, many borderline patients can successfully leave therapy. They can
get on with their lives if they have the good fortune of having established
stable, supportive living or working situations. It is not unusual, for exam-
ple, for borderline patients to find a romantic partner, or even a spouse,
whose presence can greatly diminish the relational needs served by a
therapist. Others find stable supports from extended families, self-help
groups, or church communities that are sufficient. Borderline patients
are still insecure about rejections, fearful about separations, and prone to
cut themselves, drink, binge, rage, or withdraw in the face of conflicts.
However, such reactions are less severe and less prolonged than before
therapy or during phase 1. But patients are still unable to rely on a con-
sistent inner locus of control; they remain too reactive (defiant or com-
pliant) toward external pressures.
Impasses
Individual psychotherapies rarely achieve the initial and mutual goal of
curative—or at least basic personality structure—changes. Table 12–7
identifies the common reasons that impasses occur. The reasons vary
within each phase of treatment.
Notably, whereas too much frustration in phase 2 causes dropout, too
little causes regression. Because inexperienced therapists tend to worry
too much about frustrating and thereby losing patients, they may become
targets for devaluation and dismissal by borderline patients; or, more of-
ten, these therapists create a chronically dependent and potentially re-
gressive relationship (see Sidebar 12–4). A major concern that all
therapists need to be aware of is the capacity for borderline patients to re-
gress in therapies that are too unstructured or seductive. This issue usu-
ally is not as obvious as that described in Sidebar 12–4, on the two
Margarets. The issue more often takes the form of a patient’s silent belief
that his or her therapist is doing and will continue doing for the patient
what he or she found lacking in his or her early parental relationships: lis-
tening kindly and empathically and offering an opportunity to be under-
stood nonjudgmentally, spiced by some sound advice. Although this is
not exactly a transference (insofar as the patient’s attribution is exactly
what the well-meaning therapist would say he or she is intentionally
306 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Summary
Much of the clinical literature about psychoanalytic therapies has wres-
tled with the relative merits of supportive, attachment-enhancing inter-
ventions and those that are more explicitly insight-enhancing ones. In
this chapter, I underscore the necessity of both the relational and the
learning components if therapies are to be successful. Both empirical
work and clinical experience document the overriding importance of
supportive forms of interventions (e.g., empathy, validation, reassurance,
clarification) during the second phase of therapy if the therapy is con-
ducted within the agreed-on usual framework. Nonetheless, it is of critical
importance, even early in therapies, to underscore the tasks of therapy: to
learn about oneself and to change as a result of what is learned. When this
task orientation is combined with the development of a trusting and de-
pendent relationship, the borderline patient will be able to function, and
the therapy will move into a third phase. During this period, the focus in
sessions is often on the borderline patient’s learning to identify his or her
feelings and how they relate to the therapist’s behaviors or words. The
gradually improved ability to understand feelings correctly and to accept
unsupportive feedback (e.g., interpretation, confrontations, impatience,
criticisms) enables the patient to form stable relationships. The fourth
phase of therapy will be more fully insight oriented, and the patient’s
ownership of hostilities and resolution of developmental failures allow
the previously borderline patient to compete and to take independent,
self-serving initiatives.
The hope that borderline patients can undergo curative change from
psychodynamic psychotherapies is justified, but such change rarely oc-
curs. It is critically important that therapists appreciate the sequence of
changes and their approximate timetable so as not to foreshorten unwit-
tingly this long-term process.
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Chapter 13
FUTURE CONSIDERATIONS
Treatment Implications
Development of Specialists and Special Services
This book’s recurrent themes have implications for the care of border-
line patients. First, a range of services is usually needed. It is and always
has been rare for any individual with BPD to make major gains from any
one therapy. The hope that one person or one modality might effect such
gains has most frequently been attributed to individual psychotherapy
delivered by experts. Yet accounts of successful individual therapy show
that it has almost always involved other modalities (considered adjunc-
tive), such as group therapies, hospitalization, medications, or family
315
316 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Diagnostic Implications
DSM-V
Some of the current personality disorders may be better conceptualized as
extreme variants of normal personality, whereas others may be better con-
ceptualized as spectrum variants of Axis I disorders (Figure 13–1). As
DSM-V emerges on the horizon, there has been some interest in trying to
put BPD within a dimensional system (Krueger et al. 2007). BPD’s exten-
sive validation, its severity of impairment, and, above all, the specificity of
its treatment needs, as documented throughout this book, distinguish it
from most other personality disorders, and this should be reflected by its
place in DSM-V. The safest way to do this is to retain BPD as a disorder of
the self (a personality disorder) but to take measures that ensure that it re-
ceives a priority akin to Axis I disorders for treatment and reimbursement.
to learn about this condition and find treatment resources. The Appen-
dix at the end of this book provides an index of the many types of infor-
mation available for consumers. This information is rapidly expanding in
amount, variety, and utilization.
Bridging the gap between clinicians and families has far-reaching con-
sequences. That family members usually do not define themselves as pa-
tients (Chapter 8) means that they can easily convert their parental hopes
for better treatment and their alliance with the treating clinicians into ad-
vocacy. This has been dramatically evident in the success of national or-
ganizations such as the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) and
the Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance (DBSA), formerly known as
the National Depressive and Manic-Depressive Association, which have
worked relentlessly to decrease stigma and increase research into mental
illnesses. The same need has long been evident for borderline patients:
they have a chronic disease of great public health significance that enor-
mously burdens families who too often are deeply shamed by it.
In 1994, Valerie Porr founded an organization in New York City, Treat-
ment and Research Advancements Association for Personality Disorder
(TARA APD), dedicated to advocacy. In 1995, graduates (“veterans”) of
McLean Hospital’s psychoeducational multiple-family groups (described
in Chapter 8) and of Perry Hoffman’s dialectical behavior therapy (DBT)
for families at the New York Presbyterian Hospital, Westchester Division,
formed similar organizations: the New England Personality Disorder As-
sociation (NEPDA) and the National Education Alliance for Borderline
Personality Disorder (NEA-BPD), respectively. These organizations have
drawn attention to the little-recognized plight of this population.
Both NEA-BPD (and its companion group NEPDA) and TARA APD
have helped convert the despair of BPD patients into protests and public
action. Their advocacy has largely been responsible for NAMI’s recent
adoption of BPD. These efforts will be buttressed by research document-
ing how comorbidity with BPD accounts for much of the resistance to
treatment of anxiety and mood disorders—disorders that have far more
recognition, research, and insurance support—and by documentation of
the enormous costs to society of BPD, both in disability and in liability.
The initiatives of both NEPDA and TARA APD include
ested others may learn more and, more importantly, take action on
behalf of the mentally ill
• developing self-help groups modeled on Alcoholics Anonymous and
the DBSA.
Summary
Since the 1970s, an industrious and diverse group of clinicians and scien-
tists have created a space for BPD in the minds of the mental health com-
munity. The results of these efforts are evident in the greatly expanded
Future Considerations ❘ 325
body of knowledge about this disorder. In this book, I have reviewed the
advances in treatment of BPD, and it makes clear that we already know
enough to significantly improve the prognosis of these patients. Knowl-
edge will continue to grow. The more immediate task is to implement
and disseminate what is already apparent. For those tasks, this book is in-
tended to provide a template.
The space created for the borderline diagnosis exists on another,
more abstract level. For the mental health field, it provides a needed asy-
lum for creative theory building and research. This disorder has thus far
warded off conceptual reductionism or the constraints of entrenched
standards of care. BPD is not the intellectual or clinical property of psy-
choanalysts, of psychologists or psychiatrists, of researchers or clinicians,
or of theoreticians or practitioners. All are part “owners” who remain vi-
tally necessary contributors. This book is intended to communicate the
excitement and challenge of being a part of this community.
In the years ahead, a different task awaits. It is of critical importance to
the welfare of these patients that their tragedies—and their potential for
change—enter the collective mind of the larger society of which the men-
tal health community is only a small part. Successfully attaining this much
higher level of collective consciousness will be assisted by initiatives from
those who are prepared to become public advocates. Attaining this goal
ultimately rests on the still unquenched and seemingly inexhaustible ap-
peal for rescue that, to their credit, remains the public marker for these
patients.
References
Adler G, Buie DH Jr: Aloneness and borderline psychopathology: the
possible relevance of child development issues. Int J Psychoanal
60:83–96, 1979
Akiskal HS: Subaffective disorders: dysthymic, cyclothymic and bipolar II
disorders in the “borderline” realm. Psychiatr Clin North Am 4:25–
46, 1981
American Psychiatric Association: Practice guideline for the treatment of
patients with borderline personality disorder. Am J Psychiatry
158(suppl):1–52, 2001
Bender DS, Dolan RT, Skodol AE, et al: Treatment utilization by patients
with personality disorders. Am J Psychiatry 158:295–302, 2001
Benjamin LS: Interpersonal Diagnosis and Treatment of Personality Dis-
orders. New York, Guilford, 1993
Fonagy P: Thinking about thinking: some clinical and theoretical consid-
erations in the treatment of a borderline patient. Int J Psychoanal 72
(Pt 4):639–656, 1991
326 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
PSYCHOEDUCATIONAL
RESOURCES: PRINTED MATERIALS,
VIDEOS, FILMS, AND WEB SITES
Printed Materials
Overviews
“Borderline Personality Disorder.” Journal of the California Alliance for the
Mentally Ill, Vol. 8, No. 1, 1997.
Wide-ranging and very readable comments from experts, families,
and persons with borderline personality disorder (BPD).
Borderline Personality Disorder Demystified: An Essential Guide for Understand-
ing and Living With BPD, by R.O. Friedel. New York, Avalon Publish-
ing Group, 2004.
An experienced and compassionate psychiatrist shares his wisdom.
Borderline Personality Disorder: What You Need to Know, by J. Gunderson. Bel-
mont, MA, McLean Hospital, 2002.
A concise, informative summary.
I Hate You, Don’t Leave Me: Understanding the Borderline Personality, by J.J.
Kreisman and H. Straus. New York, Avon, 1991.
Readable and instructive; the first book for lay people.
Imbroglio, by J. Cauwels. New York, W.W. Norton, 1992.
Scholarly and understandable; a bit dated.
Life at the Border: Understanding and Recovering From the Borderline Personality
Disorder, by L. M. Heller. Okeechobee, FL, Dyslimbia Press, 1999.
A biological perspective; overestimates the role of medications.
New Hope for People With Borderline Personality Disorder, by N.R. Bockian, V.
Porr, and N. E. Villagran. Roseville, CA, Prima Publishing, 2002.
A readable, informative book incorporating the new knowledge
about improved treatments and improved prognosis.
329
330 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Family Issues
The Family Crucible, by A. Y. Napier and C. Whitaker. New York, Bantam
Books, 1978.
How one family member can bring covert family issues to light.
“Family Guidelines,” by J. G. Gunderson and C. Berkowitz. Belmont, MA,
New England Personality Disorder Association (NEPDA), McLean
Hospital, 2002.
Concise directions on how to improve the family environment.
Siren’s Dance: My Marriage to a Borderline: A Case Study, by A. Walker. Em-
maus, PA, Rodale, 2003.
A readable and dramatic account of a spouse’s experience.
Sometimes I Act Crazy: Living With Borderline Personality Disorder, by J.J. Kreis-
man and H. Straus. Hoboken, NJ, Wiley, 2004.
The readable sequel to I Hate You, Don’t Leave Me: Understanding the
Borderline Personality is directed to families.
Stop Walking on Eggshells: Taking Your Life Back When Someone You Care About
Has Borderline Personality Disorder, by R. Kreger and P. T. Mason. Oak-
land, CA, New Harbinger Publications, 1998.
An encouraging manual for skill building.
Instructive Books
A Bright Red Scream: Self-Mutilation and the Language of Pain, by M. Strong.
New York, Penguin Books, 1998.
Diana in Search of Herself: Portrait of a Troubled Princess, by S.B. Smith. New
York, Times Books/Crown Publishing, 1999.
Readable, insightful glimpse of the distinction between public per-
sona and internal strife.
Eclipses: Behind the Borderline Personality Disorder, by M.F. Thornton. Madi-
son, AL, Monte Sano Publishing, 1997.
Appendix: Psychoeducational Resources ❘ 331
Newsletters
TARA Times. From TARA, 23 Greene St., New York, NY 10013.
Excellent accounts of public health costs and of advocacy initia-
tives and opportunities.
Videos
“Back From the Edge.” BPD Resource Center. Cambridge, MA, Lichten-
stein Creative Media, 2007.
Vivid, articulate, evocative first-person accounts.
“Beyond the Borderline.” Western Psychological Association. Albany, NY,
Olive Tree Productions, 1998.
“Borderline Syndrome: A Personality Disorder of Our Time.” Narrated by
Maureen Stapleton. Albany, NY, Olive Tree Productions, 1988.
An instructive introduction.
Films
Bliss (with Craig Sheffer and Sheryl Lee). Triumph Films/Stewart Pic-
tures, 1997.
A poignant look at a lost soul with a history of childhood sexual abuse.
Fatal Attraction (with Glenn Close). Paramount Pictures, 1987.
Frightening portrait of abandonment rage.
332 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Girl, Interrupted (with Winona Ryder and Angelina Jolie). Columbia Pic-
tures, 1999.
More vivid than the book (see earlier book listing).
Lethal Weapon (with Mel Gibson). Warner Bros., 1987.
Captures identity disturbance.
Looking for Mr. Goodbar (with Diane Keaton). Paramount Pictures, 1977.
Captures emptiness, thrill seeking, and good/bad split self.
Play Misty for Me (with Clint Eastwood). Universal Studios, 1971.
Torment by others who resist being possessed.
Taxi Driver (with Robert De Niro and Jodie Foster). Columbia Pictures,
1976.
Web Sites
(prepared by Maria Daversa, Ph.D., and Marc Walter, M.D.)
BPD Central
http://www.bpdcentral.com
Information—organized by Randi Kreger; provides basic information
about BPD; especially useful for consumers, partners, and par-
ents
Links—to national and international organizations, research and
treatment, newsgroups, legal help, and regional support groups
Referral source—Find a Therapist, libraries, hiring an attorney, and tele-
phone support groups
Lists—many videos, books, articles with a bias toward work by Randi
Kreger, the author of the site
BPD Sanctuary
http://www.mhsanctuary.com/borderline
Information—supportive and hopeful testimony by and for borderline
patients; provides many links to BPD communities (chat rooms,
bulletin boards, blogs, open forums); information for consumers
and clinicians; also has Ask the Therapist and Ask the Experts sec-
tions
Links—for clinicians, consumers, a family section with a family chat
room, bulletin boards, and resources specific for families
Referral source—provides a list of doctors and therapists by state who
treat BPD, a link to 1-800-Therapist, and toll-free resources and
hotlines
Lists—extensive bookstore separated by topics related to BPD and
general mental health, plus a list of 75 articles
Appendix: Psychoeducational Resources ❘ 333
BPD today
http://www.borderlinepersonalitytoday.com
Information—provides information about BPD for consumers, fami-
lies of consumers, and clinicians
Links—bookstore; library; discussions for families; questions and an-
swers with experts; and resources for clinicians, families, consum-
ers, spiritual support, and volunteers
Referral source—provides a link to 1-800-Therapist
Lists—many articles and books related to BPD, families, children,
medications, child abuse, and self-harm
BPD World
http://www.bpdworld.org
Registered charity for people with BPD in the United Kingdom
(founded and created by Joshua Cole in March 2003; Registered
Charity Number: 1111750)
Information—provides information about BPD, relationships, and
treatment options
Links—information about BPD, including theories and causes; gen-
eral mental health, child abuse, depression, eating disorders, and
self-harm
Referral source—free counseling service, advocacy, and telephone sup-
port is provided by centers in United Kingdom
Lists—has selection of free printed material on BPD, cognitive-behav-
ioral therapy, dialectical behavior therapy, self-harm, and crisis in-
formation; however, available only in United Kingdom
Referral source—none
Lists—minimal number of articles and books related to coexisting dis-
orders, BPD in children and adolescents, dialectical behavior
therapy, BPD, families, medications, psychotherapies, and fea-
tures of BPD
Palace net
http://www.palace.net/~llama/psych/bpd.html
Information—limited to several major researchers, clinicians, and
DSM
Links—none
Referral source—list of treatment programs from the National Institute
of Mental Health
Lists—none
Appendix: Psychoeducational Resources ❘ 335
Web 4 Health
http://www.web4health.info
Information—a primarily ICD-10 view of BPD, can submit questions
online for responses by BPD experts (from Europe), uses a ques-
tion-and-answer format with answers taken from peer-reviewed
articles; is difficult to navigate and hard to find topics
Links—to sites about general health, mental health, hotlines, library
and research, blogs, psychological testing, and mental health
search engines
Referral source—European BPD experts provide free “Ask an Expert”
online services
Lists—none
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INDEX
Page numbers printed in boldface type refer to tables or figures.
Page numbers followed by an s refer to sidebars.
Page numbers followed by a v refer to vignettes.
337
338 ❘ BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER: A CLINICAL GUIDE
Environment, 28, 96, 321. See also Fluoxetine (Prozac), 141s, 150, 150v,
Holding and holding 161
environment Fonagy, P., 15s, 18s, 20s, 236, 319,
antisocial personality disorder, 321. See also Mentalization;
58 Mentalization-based therapy
family, 79, 118s, 179, 186, 189, 192 empathy, 292, 293
invalidating, 257, 258, 287s family therapy, 189, 191, 194
narcissistic personality disorder, Frosch, John, 16
56
Gabapentin, for management of
Families. See also Group therapy; anxiety, 168
Psychoeducation General psychiatric management,
goals, in sociotherapies, 73 263
interventions and therapies, 177– Girl, Interrupted (Kaysen), 65–66, 323
205 Grinker, Roy, 2, 2s–3s, 3–4, 4
establishing an alliance, 187– Group meetings, level III care, 126–
189 127
history, 178–180, 180 Group therapy, 127, 207–223. See also
initial family meetings, 183– Families
187, 184s, 186s–187s common problems, 218–221
marital or couples therapy, disruptive group behaviors,
197–201, 198v–199v, 200v 218–219, 218v–219v
psychoeducational family outside-of-group contacts,
therapy, 189, 189–196, 219v–220v, 219–221
191s, 192–193, 193s, 195s– silence, 221, 221v
196s dialectical behavior therapy,
resistance, 181v–182v, 181–183, component of, 258
182s–183s engaging patient in, 208–209
therapists and goals, in sociotherapies, 73
countertransferences, group structure, 216–218
180–181 duration, 216–217
multiple-family group, 190 leadership, 217–218
problem identification, 184–185 length, 216
punitive parents, 272 size, 216
resources for, 330 indications, 207–208
single-family interventions, 189– psychodynamic group therapies,
190 214–216
Family therapy, 189, 189–196, 191s, interpersonal group
192–193, 193s, 195s–196s. See also psychotherapy, 214–215,
Psychoeducation 215s
early stage, 191, 191s, 192–193, mentalization-based group
193s therapy, 215–216
late state, 195–196, 195s–196s skills training groups, 209–210,
middle stage, 194–195 209–214
Films, for psychoeducation, 331–332 Guilt, in families, 186s–187s
Index ❘ 343
Kernberg, Otto (continued) Linehan, M.M., 14, 229, 293. See also
debate Dialectical behavior therapy
with Kohut/Adler, 280s–281s, debate with Kernberg, 286s–287s
281–282, 282 skills training groups, 211, 212
with Linehan, 286s–287s split treatment, 109–110
identity disturbance, 16 therapist
Menninger Psychotherapy credentials, 240s–241s
Research Project, 282–283, qualities, 241, 242s–243s,
284, 293 245
splitting, 12 Listening skills, goal of
containment of, 121s sociotherapies, 73
therapist Lithium, 150v, 160
credentials, 240s–241s Little, Margaret, 302s, 303s
qualities, 242s–243s Living skills, level III goal, 123
therapy Losing and Fusing (Lewin and Schulz),
contracting for, 99s 71
prerequisites for, 227
Klonopin, 145 Mack, John, 24
Kohut, Heinz, 78, 280s–281s, 281, MACT (Manual-assisted cognitive
282 treatment), 273–274
Magical thinking, cognitive-
Lamotrigine, 160 perceptual symptom, 17
for management of Major depressive disorder, 38, 39, 40–
affective dyscontrol/ 43, 41, 42
depression, 164 group therapy, 208
anger/impulsivity, 162 Manners, goal of sociotherapies,
anxiety, 169 73
cognitive-perceptual Manual-assisted cognitive treatment
dyscontrol, 167 (MACT), 273–274
Leadership, of group therapy, 217– MAOIs. See Monoamine oxidase
218 inhibitors
Learned associations, 255 Marital therapy, 184s, 197–201
Levels of care, 68, 69, 113–137, 116 acting-out couples, 198v–199v
family interventions, 177 caregiving spouse-type couples,
functions, 114 200, 200v
level I (outpatient), 133–134 mutual projective-type couples,
level II (intensive outpatient), 199–200, 200v
130–133 therapeutic processes, 201
level III (residential/partial Masterson, J.F., 12, 18, 279, 281s, 319,
hospital/day treatment), 321
122–130 family therapy, 178, 179, 197
level IV (hospital), 115–122 McLean Hospital, 227–228, 273–274,
selection or change of, 114–115, 283, 284, 285, 316, 324, 317
116 Medications. See Pharmacotherapy
Liability, 92, 93s, 147s Men, in group therapy, 208
Index ❘ 345