Dr. S. Finch MD,CM, FRCPC, ABAM-Diplomate.  BPD is common disorder, especially in clinical populations  Prevalence 1-2% general population, up to 10-20%

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Understanding Depression
Advertisements

Clare Shaw clareshawconsultancy.co.uk clareshaw.co.uk.
Anxiety Disorders Assessment & Diagnosis SW 593. Introduction  Anxiety disorders are serious medical illnesses that affect approximately 19 million American.
Lesson 1 – Mental Disorders
Child and Adolescent Psychopathology
B ORDELINE P ERSONALITY D ISORDER (BPD) Zitlaly Ortega Period 6.
IzBen C. Williams, MD, MPH Instructor. Lecture - 11 MOOD DISORDERS.
DSM-5 diagnostic criteria for borderline personality disorder (APA, 2013) A pervasive pattern of instability of interpersonal relationships, self-image.
1 Personality Disorders and Substance Use Disorders “What’s the connection?”
Personality Disorders Alison Hetherington. Case study Patient Patient –Mrs H –64 years old –Admitted to Heather ward on 23 rd December 2009 HPC HPC –Attempted.
Treating Borderline Personality Disorder in the Primary Care Setting Presented by: Jonathan Betlinski, MD Date: 11/20/2014.
Assessing Borderline Personality Disorder in the Primary Care Setting Presented by: Jonathan Betlinski, MD Date: 11/13/2014.
Dialectical Behaviour Therapy and Borderline Personality Disorder.
BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER BRENDA ORTIZ PERIOD 1 APRIL 14, 2012.
1.Emotional responses, especially anger. 2. impulsive behaviors that harm themselves or others. 3. suspiciousness, poor sense of identity, and an unstable.
BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER. CAUSES -Genetic factors since twins and families member might inherit them from others in their family or strong associated.
BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER I HATE YOU, PLEASE DON’T LEAVE ME Tori Collins.
MENTAL HEALTH Understanding Mental Illness. Defining Mental Illness Clinical definition Clinically significant behavioral problems Clinically significant.
Schizophrenia Monica Gindi Table of Contents IntroductionSymptomsOnsetCause Neurological effect DiagnosisManagement.
Consultation/Liaison in Child & Adolescent Psychiatry Zaid B Malik, MD Zaid B Malik, MD Assistant Professor Vice Chief of Child Psychiatry Asst. Residency.
Major Depressive Disorder Presenting Complaints
Psychiatric Disorders and Suicide Assessment Woodbridge Township School District First-year Teacher Training Program University Behavioral HealthCare University.
Section 12: Crisis Intervention UCLA. Give me some examples Form groups of 4-6. Agree on 3 examples of crises faced by your staff What made these crises.
Severe and Persistent Mental Illness and Mothers A Mothers’ Mental Health Toolkit Project Learning Video with Dr. Joanne MacDonald Reproductive Mental.
SUICIDE: RISK FACTORS Dr. Nooshin Parvaresh Child & Adolescent Psychiatrist Kerman University Of Medical Sciences.
Borderline Personality Disorder
IzBen C. Williams, MD, MPH Instructor. Lecture - 8 MOOD DISORDERS.
What’s in a name …….. emotional instability in Adolescence Demelza Heneghan CNM 2 St. Josephs Adolescent Day Hospital,Demelza Heneghan CNM 2 St. Josephs.
HANDOUT: PERSONALITY TRAITS SEEN IN THE HARD-TO-SERVE CLIENT: CHALLENGES FOR THE TREATMENT TEAM Stella L. Blackshaw M.D. FRCPC Professor of Psychiatry.
Suicide Back to Basics March 19, 2012 Clare Gray MD FRCPC.
Chapter 10 Counseling At Risk Children and Adolescents.
DEPRESSION AWARENESS AND SUICIDE PREVENTION Health Science II Mental Health Unit.
Case Finding and Care in Suicide: Children, Adolescents and Adults Chapter 36.
Differential Diagnosis: Borderline Personality Disorder DSM IV Diagnostic Criteria –A pervasive pattern of instability of interpersonal relationships,
BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER By: Brenda Vazquez, Doua Xiong, Dominique Yang.
Understanding Mental Illness A Review of the Disorders Paul Knoll, PhD, LMHC, CAP Director Recovery Center, TMH
ADOLESCENTS IN CRISIS: WHEN TO ADMIT FOR SELF-HARM OR AGGRESSIVE BEHAVIOR Kristin Calvert.
Copyright © 2007, 2003 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc. Chapter 36 Mental Health Problems.
Mental Health Nursing: Suicidal Behavior By Mary B. Knutson, RN, MS, FCP.
The Development of Borderline Personality and Self-Inflicted Injury Chapter 18 Sheila E. Crowell, Erin A. Kaufman, and Mark F. Lenzenweger.
Psychiatric Impact of Childhood Sexual Abuse: Life on the Borderline Survivors of Abuse – Access to Justice Information Seminar, 14 May 2004 Ian Curtis.
Suicide. Definitions Suicide: intentional self-inflicted death Suicidal ideation: thoughts of killing oneself (i.e., serving as the agent of one’s death)
Depression and Suicide. Suicide: Terminology Suicidal ideation (SI)--Thoughts Suicidal ideation (SI)--Thoughts Suicidal threats-- Stated intent to end.
RNSG 1163 Summer Qe8cR4Jl10.
Readings Wenar, C. & Kerig, P. (2000)“ Disorders in the depressive spectrum and child and adolescent suicide in Developmental Psychopathology (pp ).
Mental Health Emergencies. Mental Health Mental Health in the ED Mental Health in the ED Focused surveyFocused survey History of present illness & patient’s.
Risk assessment and triage of children in school setting Eugene Grudnikoff MD Nov. 2, 2015
Stress and Depression Common Causes Common Signs and Symptoms Coping Strategies Caring & Treatment Tips.
Introduction Suicide is a complex human behavior. There is no one reason why an individual chooses to end his or her life. Suicide has been defined as.
What are they and how many people are affected? What are they? Behavior patterns or mental processes that cause serious personal suffering or interfere.
SUICIDE. Suicide is a major preventable public health problem. In 2007 it was the 10th leading cause of death in the United States. It was responsible.
Schizoaffective, Delusional and Other Psychotic Disorders Chapter 17.
23 September 2013 Questions Trivia: 47% of people surveyed say they would change this about their appearance. What is it? Brain teaser: How could you give.
Borderline Personality Disorder Mallory and Sonia.
 Borderline Personality Disorder – Is a condition in which people have long term patterns of unstable or turbulent emotions, such as feelings about themselves.
SUICIDE PREVENTION & MENTAL ILLNESS END THE STIGMA.
SUICIDE PREVENTION WEEK SEPTEMBER 7 – 13 **If you are in crisis and need help: call this toll-free number, available 24 hours a day, every day TALK.
Depression and Suicide Chapter 4.3. Health Stats What relationship is there between risk of depression and how connected teens feel to their school? What.
What is Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD)? Presentation is often in early adulthood BPD is a cluster B personality trait BPD affects how the individual.
Depression and Suicide All Rights reserved Austin Community College.
NSFT Integrated Delivery Teams
Depression and Suicide
Assessing Suicide Risk
CRISIS RESOLUTION / HOME TREATMENT - DEFINITION
Personality Disorders and Substance Use Disorders
Yangsan Hospital Mingeol Kim, M.D., ACT.
SUICIDE Dr. Kayj Nash Okine.
University of Nizwa College of Pharmacy and Nursing School of Pharmacy
Dr Neil Hunt Consultant Psychiatrist
Understanding Depression
Presentation transcript:

Dr. S. Finch MD,CM, FRCPC, ABAM-Diplomate

 BPD is common disorder, especially in clinical populations  Prevalence 1-2% general population, up to 10-20% outpatients, 25% agitated emergency patients  BPD often present in crisis, suicidal and often in ED  Challenging to work with

 Diagnosis engenders strong reactions  Over diagnosed and under diagnosed  Black and white approach to treatment  Patient’s concerns may be dismissed, suicide risk minimized and negative outcomes blamed on patient

 Most literature based on intensive outpatient treatments  Crisis management strategies usually end with transfer to ED  Today’s discussion, 3 parts:  Diagnosis and recognition of BPD  Crisis presentations  Strategies to treat BPD in crisis

 DSM-IV-TR defines a PD as: “enduring subjective experiences and behaviour that deviate from cultural standards, are rigidly pervasive, have an onset in adolescence or early adulthood, are stable through time and lead to unhappiness and impairment.”

 Borderline between psychosis and neurosis  characterized by extremely unstable affect, behaviour, mood, self-image and object relations  ICD-10: emotionally unstable PD  “as-if” personality

 Abandonment  Stormy relationships  Identity disturbance  Impulsivity  Chronic suicidality  Mood reactivity  Emptiness  Anger/rage  Paranoia/dissociation

 Negative counter transference reaction  Manipulation  Self-sabotage  Help-seeking, help-rejecting pattern  Transitional objects, “teddy bear” sign

 Just a negative reaction to a patient  A cross-sectional diagnosis  A hopeless case

 more commonly have childhood histories of physical and sexual abuse, neglect, and early parental loss and separation  Frequently co-morbid with other PDs  Axis 1: mood disorders, PTSD, SUDs, eating disorders, ADHD, panic disorder, dissociative disorders

 Unknown  Multifactorial  heterogeneous  Genetic/neuroanatomy  Amygdala/limbic system  Serotonin 5HTT transporter gene  Heritability inconsistent  Dimensional, genetic phenotypes  Livesley – four factor model  Developmental  Kernberg – object relations  Mahler – object constancy  Bowlby – insecure attachments  Bipolar variant  Recent review (Paris,Gunderson) did not support  Complex PTSD  Herman

 “an unstable period”  “a crucial stage or turning point”  A sudden worsening

 “frantic effort to avoid abandonment” manifests itself in an exaggerated, often maladaptive response  Attempt to solicit caring response  Present in crisis due to extreme response, instability, affect dysregulation, lack of social supports, trauma history  Self harm, suicidality, aggression/anger, intoxication, risky impulsivity, psychosis/dissociation

 Loss  Abandonment  Rejection  Financial stress  Impulsive behaviour  Self-loathing  Conflict in relationships  Intoxication  Being alone  Trauma  New  Re-enactment  Triggers

SPLITTING PROJECTIVE IDENTIFICATION Bad Object Good Object

IDEALIZED, GOOD OBJECT  Rescuer  Wants to help pt  Takes over  Over advocates  Poor boundaries  Reinforced by pt. statements such as: “you are the only one who has ever understood” DEVALUED, BAD OBJECT  Dismisser  Doesn’t listen or empathize  Dismisses patient concerns  Reacts angrily  Challenging, confrontational  Gives “cookbook”, unhelpful suggestions

RESCUER  Feeds into splitting  Divides team  Decreased pt. Responsibility  Boundary violations  Isolated with pt.  Burned out  Abandon pt. DISMISSER  Escalate pt.  Anger  Increased suicide risk  Pt. Threats, complaints  Reject pt.

 Interactions can lead to re-enactments of negative, traumatic relationships  Interactions can make pt. worse and increase suicide risk  Important to be real, caring, set limits, enforce boundaries – therapeutic for the patient

 8-10% of patients with BPD complete suicide  Patients with BPD represent 9-33% of all suicides  History of suicidal behaviour in 60-78% of patients with BPD  Chronic suicidality with 4 or more visits to psych ED, most often diagnosed with BPD, 12% of all psych ED visits  Common co-morbidities increase suicide risk  BPD pts. have multiple suicide risk factors

 McGirr et al., 2007  BPD suicide associated with higher levels Axis 1 co- morbidity, novelty seeking, hostility, co-morbid PD, lower levels harm avoidance  Fewer psych hospitalizations and suicide attempts but increased SUD, cluster B co-morbidity  Pompili et al., 2005  Higher rates of suicide in short term vs. Long term follow- up, suggests highest suicide risk in initial phases of illness  Links suggests higher risk of suicide in young pts. (adolescence to 3 rd decade)  Paris suggests higher risk of suicide in late 30s, no active treatment, failed treatment

 Zaheer, Links, Liu Psychiatric clinics NA, 2008 ▪ RCT, 180 patients, BPD + recurrent suicidal behaviour ▪ Prospective trial to assess risk factors of high lethality vs. Low lethality attempters ▪ High lethality attempters: older, more children, PTSD, other PD esp. ASPD, specific phobia, anorexia, lower GAF, more childhood abuse, more exp to meds, more hospitalizations, more expectation of fatal outcome ▪ Independent variables: exp fatal outcome, schizotypal dim, PTSD, lower GAF, specific phobia, # psych admissions last 4 months ▪ “suffering chronic illness course with significant psychosocial impairment. These patients may be demonstrating an escalating series of suicide attempts with more and more suicide intention.”

 Acute on chronic risk  Acute stressors and acute risk factors increase acute risk  Many BPD pts. meet criteria for Form 1/3 chronically  Current Axis 1 co-morbidity, substance use, stressors, lack of protective factors and supports  3 signs that immediately precede pt. Suicide: a precipitating event, intense affective state, changes in behaviour patterns ▪ Hendin et al., 2001

 Dawson – never admit a patient with BPD ▪ influential  Paris, Linehan – recommend against admission ▪ Positively reinforcing socially ▪ Reinforces suicidal and self-destructive behaviours ▪ Regression  Sometimes patients admitted due to lack of connection with resources  APA Guidelines 2001  Indications for brief hospitalization: ▪ Imminent danger to others ▪ Serious suicide attempt, loss of control suicidal impulses ▪ Psychotic episodes with poor judgement/ poor impulse control ▪ Severe unresponsive symptoms interfering with functioning

 Patient quote from Williams, 1998 ▪ “Do not hospitalize a person with BPD for more than 48 hours. My self-destructive episodes – one leading right into another – came out only after my first and subsequent hospital admissions, after I learned the system was usually obligated to respond....When you as a service provider do not give the expected response to these threats, you’ll be accused of not caring. What you are really doing is being cruel to be kind. When my doctor wouldn’t hospitalize me, I accused him of not caring if I lived or died. He replied, referring to my cycle of repeated hospitalizations, “That’s not life.” And he was 100% right.”

 Pascual et al., 2007 ▪ 11,578 consecutive visits to psych ED ▪ BPD diagnosed for 9% (1032 visits), 540 individuals ▪ 11% hospitalized – suicide risk, danger to others, symptom severity, difficulty with self-care, non- compliance to treatment ▪ Pts. with BPD had greater clinical severity, percent hospitalized lower (11 vs 17%)

 General Principles: ▪ Try to discharge ▪ Admit as briefly as possible ▪ Overnight in ER or holding beds ▪ Keep voluntary ▪ Carefully assessed diagnosis essential ▪ Care plans ▪ Good discharge planning

 Triage BPD patients last as long as safely contained in ED  Some pts leave before seen  Some pts settle, use own resources to manage crisis  + reinforcement of positive behaviour, - reinforcement extreme behaviours

 Linehan, 1993 ▪ Listen to emotional content of sucidality/crisis and validate feelings ▪ Identify circumstances leading to feelings ▪ Dialogue with pt to develop alternative solutions  Livesley, 2005 ▪ Safety and managing crises ▪ Containment ▪ Control and regulation ▪ Interventions to reduce self-harming behaviours ▪ Controlling and regulating dysphoria ▪ Reframing triggering situations

 Listen and empathize ▪ Validate pt ▪ Help pt id emotions ▪ Develop rapport ▪ Rogers-empathy, non- judgemental, unconditional + regard  Get at underlying trigger and emotion ▪ Often pt unaware ▪ Helps defuse ▪ Therapeutic ▪ Avoid, proactive  Suicide assessment ▪ Expression of distress ▪ May shift ▪ Reassess regularly ▪ Acute vs. Chronic ▪ Don’t dwell on it ▪ May reflect escape, control

▪ Relief from emotional pain comes from connection to someone who understands ▪ Align with pt’s distress and offer support and understanding ▪ Weakened by failure to acknowledge distress, lengthy attempts to clarify feelings, interpretations ▪ Strategies ▪ Praised for seeking help ▪ Help pt id strengths  Survival skills  Put situation into perspective InterpretationConfrontationClarificationEncouragement to Elaborate Empathic Validation Advice and Praise Affirmation

▪ Mobilize supports-family, friends, professionals ▪ Stepwise way to approach crisis ▪ Follow-up arrangement ▪ Caring statements, photographs ▪ Can always come back to ED ▪ Joint Crisis Plans: pt and are team prepare ahead of time

▪ Reinforce successful adaptive strategies ▪ Distraction ▪ + self talk ▪ Thought stopping ▪ Substitution ▪ Grounding ▪ Journalling/artwork ▪ Emotion log/ emotion sheets

 Benzodiazepines  Antidepressants  Mood stabilizers  Antipsychotics ▪ AVOID except acutely ▪ Dependency ▪ SSRIs>MAOIs ▪ Low mood, anxiety, impulsivity, anger ▪ Anger management ▪ Safety risks – OD, preg ▪ Helps all symptoms ▪ Low dose, prn, ongoing ▪ Side effects ▪ Typical vs. atypical

 Meds are tools to help with symptom control  Meds symptom based vs. generally helpful  First do no harm ▪ OD potential ▪ Pregnancy risk ▪ Med dependency/diversion ▪ withdrawal  Prescriptions for small amounts

 Pascual et al, 2008 ▪ 11,578 consecutive visits to psych ED over 4 years ▪ 1032 (9%) visits diagnosed BPD, 540 individuals ▪ Prescribe benzos  Male sex, anxiety, good self care, few med or drug problems, housing instability ▪ Prescribe antipsychotics  Male sex, danger to others, psychosis ▪ Prescribe antidepressants  Depression, little premorbid dysfunction

 Damsa et al, 2007 ▪ 25 pts, severe agitation + BPD ▪ Received 10mg im olanzapine ▪ Reduced agitation, good tolerance within 2hrs ▪ 16% required second dose  Pascual et al, 2004 ▪ 12 BPD pts ▪ Received ziprasidone 20mg im then oral ziprasidone mg/day, monitored up to 2 weeks ▪ Overall significant improvement, well tolerated

 Helpful to give the patient something ▪ Follow-up appointment ▪ Crisis line number ▪ Prescription/meds ▪ Voice mail ▪ Treatment plan ▪ Written note

 Beware  No medico-legal value  Does not replace assessment, treatment plan, documentation  Helpful when ongoing therapeutic relationship  Sometimes helpful as part of suicide assessment  Do not base clinical decisions on contract