1,305
Views
1
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Perspectives on person-centred care for borderline personality disorder: a critical research agenda

ORCID Icon, , ORCID Icon, , ORCID Icon &
Pages 1-15 | Received 22 Aug 2019, Accepted 17 Nov 2019, Published online: 19 Jan 2020

References

  • Agnew, G., Shannon, C., Ryan, T., Storey, L., & McDonnell, C. (2016). Self and identity in women with symptoms of borderline personality. International Journal of Qualitative Studies of Health and Well-Being, 11, 1–9.
  • American Psychiatric Association. (2013). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (5th ed.). Arlington: American Psychiatric Publishing.
  • Bateman, A. W., Gunderson, J., & Mulder, R. (2015). Treatment of personality disorder. The Lancet, 385(9969), 735–743.
  • Bendelow, G. (2004). Sociology and concepts of mental illness. Philosophy, Psychiatry, & Psychology, 11(2), 145–146.
  • Biskin, R., & Paris, J. (2012). Diagnosing borderline personality disorder. Canadian Medical Association Journal, 184(16), 1789–1794.
  • Blackman, L. (2007). Psychiatric culture and bodies of resistance. Body & Society, 13(2), 1–23.
  • Blackman, L. (2017). The challenges of new biopsychosocialities: Hearing voices, trauma, epigenetics and mediated perception. The Sociological Review, 64(1), 256–273.
  • Blaxter, M. (1978). Diagnosis as category and process: The case of alcoholism. Social Science & Medicine, 12, 9–17.
  • Bourne, J. (2011). From bad character to BPD: The medicalization of ‘personality disorder’. In M. Rapley, J. Moncrieff, & J. Dillon (Eds.), De-medicalizing misery: Psychiatry, psychology and the human condition (pp. 66–85). London: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Brown, P. (1990). The name game: Toward a sociology of diagnosis. The Journal of Mind and Behavior, 11(3/4), 385–406.
  • Brown, P. (1995). Naming and framing: The social construction of diagnosis and illness. Journal of Health and Social Behaviour. Extra Issue: Forty Years of Medical Sociology: The State of the Art and Directions for the Future, 35, 34–52.
  • Callard, F., Rose, D., & Wykes, T. (2011). Close to the bench as well as at the bedside: Involving service users in all phases of translational research. Health Expectations, 15, 389–400.
  • Chandler, A. (2016). Self-injury, medicine and society: Authentic bodies. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Chanen, A.M. and Thompson, K.N. (2016). Prescribing and BPD. Australian Prescriber, 39(2), 49–53.
  • Chanen, A., C. Sharp, P. Hoffman, and Global Alliance for Prevention. (2017). Prevention and early intervention for borderline personality disorder: A novel public health priority. World Psychiatry, 16(2), 215–216.
  • Chugani, C. (2016). Recovered voices: Experiences of BPD. The Qualitative Report, 21(6), 1016–1034.
  • Clarkin, J. F., Yeomans, F. E., & Kernberg, O. F. (2007). Psychotherapy for borderline personality: Focusing on object relations. London: American Psychiatric Publishing.
  • Collins, P. (2015). Intersectionality’s definitional dilemmas. Annual Review of Sociology, 41, 1–20.
  • Collins, P. H., & Bilge, S. (2016). Intersectionality. London: John Wiley & Sons.
  • Davidson, L. (2016). The recovery movement: Implications for mental health care and enabling people to participate fully in life. Health Affairs, 35(6), 1091–1097.
  • Delaney, L. J. (2018). Patient-centred care as an approach to improving health care in Australia. Collegian, 25(1), 119–123.
  • Donald, F., Duff, C., Lawrence, K., Broadbear, J., & Rao, S. (2017a). Clinician perspectives on recovery and BPD. Journal of Mental Health Training, Education & Practice, 12(3), 199–209.
  • Donald, F., Duff, C., Lawrence, K., Broadbear, J., & Rao, S. (2017b). Consumer perspectives on personal recovery and BPD. Journal of Mental Health Training, Education & Practice, 12(6), 350–359.
  • Duff, C. (2014). Assemblages of health: Deleuze’s empiricism and the ethology of life. Dordrecht: Springer.
  • Fitzgerald, D., & Callard, F. (2016). Entangling the medical humanities. In A. Whitehead & A. Woods (Eds.), Edinburgh companion to the medical humanities (pp. 35–49). Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
  • Frías, Á, & Palma, C. (2015). Comorbidity between post-traumatic stress disorder and borderline personality disorder: A review. Psychopathology, 48(1), 1–10.
  • Gardner, J. (2017). Patient-centred medicine and the broad clinical gaze: Measuring outcomes in paediatric deep brain stimulation. BioSocieties, 12(2), 239–256.
  • Gary, H. (2018). A diagnosis of “borderline personality disorder” Who am I? Who could I have been? Who can I become? Psychosis, 10(1), 70–75. :.
  • Gask, L. and Coventry, P (2012). Person-centred mental health care. Epidemiology and Psychiatric Sciences 21(2):139–144.
  • Gunderson, J. (2009). BPD: Ontogeny of a diagnosis. American Journal of Psychiatry 166(5): 530–539.
  • Hughes, J. C., Bamford, C. and May, C. (2008). Types of centredness in health care: Themes and concepts. Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy, 11(4), 455–463.
  • Jackson, H., & Burgess, P. (2000). Personality disorders in the community: Australian national survey of mental health and wellbeing. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 35(7), 531–538.
  • James, P. and Cowman, S. (2007). Psychiatric nurses' knowledge, experience and attitudes towards clients with borderline personality disorder. Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing, 14(7), 670–678.
  • Jutel, A. (2009). Sociology of diagnosis: A preliminary review. Sociology of Health & Illness, 31(2), 278–299.
  • Jutel, A. (2015). Beyond the sociology of diagnosis. Sociology Compass, 9(9), 841–852.
  • Jutel, A., & Nettleton, S. (2011). Towards a sociology of diagnosis: Reflections and opportunities. Social Science & Medicine, 73, 793–800.
  • Kerr, I. B., Finlayson-Short, L., McCutcheon, L. K., Beard, H., & Chanen, A. M. (2015). The ‘self’ and BPD: Conceptual and clinical considerations. Psychopathology, 48(5), 339–348.
  • Kerr, L. (2004). The ‘borderline’ as the sociocultural origin of BPD. Ethical Human Psychology & Psychiatry, 6(3), 201–215.
  • Knight, F., Kokanović, R., Ridge, D., Brophy, L., Hill, N., Johnston-Ataata, K., & Herrman, H. (2018). Supported decision-making: The expectations held by people with experience of mental illness. Qualitative Health Research, 28(6), 1002–1015.
  • Kokanović, R., Bendelow, G., & Philip, B. (2013). Depression: The ambivalence of diagnosis. Sociology of Health & Illness, 35(3), 377–390. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-9566.2012.01486.x
  • Kokanović, R., Dowrick, C., Butler, E., Herrman, H., & Gunn, J. (2008). Lay accounts of depression amongst Anglo-Australian residents and East African refugees. Social Science & Medicine, 66(2), 454–466. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2007.08.019
  • Kokanović, R., Furler, J., May, C., Dowrick, C., Herrman, H., Evert, H., & Gunn, J. (2009). The politics of conducting research on depression in a cross-cultural context. Qualitative Health Research, 19(5), 708–717. doi: 10.1177/1049732309334078
  • Kokanović, R., May, C., Dowrick, C., Furler, J., Newton, D., & Gunn, J. (2010). Negotiations of distress between East Timorese and Vietnamese refugees and their family doctors in Melbourne. Sociology of Health & Illness, 32(4), 511–527. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-9566.2009.01228.x
  • Lamont, E., & Dickens, G. L. (2019). Mental health services, care provision, and professional support for people diagnosed with borderline personality disorder: Systematic review of service-user, family, and carer perspectives. Journal of Mental Health, doi: 10.1080/09638237.2019.1608923
  • Lawn, S., McMahon, J., & Zabeen, S. (2017). Foundations for change: Experiences of consumers with the diagnosis of borderline personality disorder (BPD) 2017 update. South Australia: Private Mental Health Consumer Carer Network (Australia).
  • Lee, D. (2017). A person-centred political critique of current discourses in post-traumatic stress disorder and post-traumatic growth. Psychotherapy and Politics International, 15(2), 1411–1420.
  • Leichsenring, F., Leibing, E., Kruse, J., New, A. S., & Leweke, F. (2011). Borderline personality disorder. The Lancet, 377(9759), 74–84.
  • Linehan, M. (1993). Cognitive-behavioral treatment of borderline personality disorder. New York: Guildford Press.
  • MacIntosh, H. B., Godbout, N., & Dubash, N. (2015). Borderline personality disorder: Disorder of trauma or personality, a review of the empirical literature. Canadian Psychology/Psychologie Canadienne, 56(2), 227.
  • Martin, E. (2010). Self-making and the brain. Subjectivity, 3(4), 366–381.
  • Millard, C. (2015). A history of self-harm in Britain: A genealogy of cutting and overdosing. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Moran, P., Coffey, C., Mann, A., Carlin, J. B., & Patton, G. C. (2006). Personality and substance use disorders in young adults. The British Journal of Psychiatry, 188(4), 374–379.
  • NHMRC. (2012). Clinical practice guideline for the management of BPD. Canberra: Author.
  • Paris, J. (2018). Clinical features of borderline personality disorder. In W. J. Livesley & R. Larstone (Eds.), Handbook of personality disorders: Theory, research, and treatment (pp. 419–425). New York: Guildford Press.
  • Paris, J. and Lis, E. (2012). Can sociocultural and historical mechanisms influence the development of BPD? Transcultural Psychiatry, 50(1), 140–151.
  • Pilgrim, D. (2017). Incorrigible conduct and incorrigible diagnoses: The case of personality disorder. Social Theory & Health, 15(4), 388–406.
  • Rao, S., Broadbear, J. H., Thompson, K., Correia, A., Preston, M., Katz, P., & Trett, R. (2017). Evaluation of a novel risk assessment method for self-harm associated with borderline personality disorder. Australasian Psychiatry, 25(5), 460–465.
  • Shaw, C., & Proctor, G. (2005). Women at the margins: A critique of the diagnosis of BPD. Feminism and Psychiatry, 15, 483–490.
  • Sisti, D., Segal, A. G., Siegel, A. M., Johnson, R., & Gunderson, J. (2016). Diagnosing, disclosing, and documenting borderline personality disorder: A survey of psychiatrists’ practices. Journal of Personality Disorders, 30(6), 848–856.
  • Stapleton, A., & Wright, N. (2019). The experiences of people with borderline personality disorder admitted to acute psychiatric inpatient wards: A meta-synthesis. Journal of Mental Health, 28(4), 443–457.
  • Sulzer, S. (2015). Does “difficult patient” status contribute to de facto demedicalization? The case of borderline personality disorder. Social Science & Medicine, 142, 82–89.
  • Temes, C. M., Magni, L. R., Fitzmaurice, G. M., Aguirre, B. A., Goodman, M., & Zanarini, M. C. (2017). Prevalence and severity of childhood adversity in adolescents with BPD, psychiatrically healthy adolescents, and adults with BPD. Personality and Mental Health, 11(3), 171–178.
  • Treloar, A. (2009). BPD: Patient perspectives of mental health and emergency medicine service. Psychotherapy in Australia, 15, 24–30.
  • Tseris, E. (2013). Trauma theory without feminism? Evaluating contemporary understandings of traumatized women. Affilia, 28(2), 153–164.
  • Ussher, J. M. (2013). Diagnosing difficult women and pathologising femininity: Gender bias in psychiatric nosology. Feminism & Psychology, 23(1), 63–69.
  • Veysey, S. (2014). People with a borderline personality diagnosis describe discriminatory experiences. Kōtuitui: New Zealand Journal of Social Sciences, 9(1), 20–35.
  • Viney, W., Callard, F. and Woods, A. (2015). Critical medical humanities: Embracing entanglement, taking risks. Medical Humanities, 41, 2–7.
  • Wirth-Cauchon, J. (2001). Women and borderline personality disorder: Symptoms and stories. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press.
  • Wykes, T. and Callard, F. (2010). Diagnosis, diagnosis, diagnosis: Towards DSM-5. Journal of Mental Health, 19(4), 301–304.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.