Borderline Personality Disorder

Stigmatizing Patients with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD)

Stigma is very common in BPD — not only by the general public, but even among mental health clinicians, who feel they have to create distance to protect themselves.

Stigmatizing Patients with Borderline Personality Disorder

Batya Swift Yasgur, MA, LMSW
April 03, 2015

Ms. G, a 29-year-old cashier, consulted a psychiatrist about “mood swings,” volatility, depression, and loneliness. Initially, the psychiatrist was empathetic. Encouraged by the psychiatrist’s accepting attitude, Ms. G revealed that during a recent hospitalization, she received a diagnosis of borderline personality disorder (BPD). The psychiatrist became distant and formal during the remainder of the session. Ms. G did not keep her second appointment. Instead, she presented to the emergency department following a suicide attempt.

This is not an uncommon scenario, according to Ron Aviram, PhD, a New York City-based psychologist and an adjunct associate professor at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx, New York.

“Stigma is very common in BPD — not only by the general public, but even among mental health clinicians, who feel they have to create distance to protect themselves,” Aviram told Psychiatry Advisor. Distancing may “inadvertently contribute to the patient’s self-injury and early withdrawal from treatment” by exacerbating existing feelings of unworthiness, self-loathing, invalidation, and rejection, he added.

Numerous studies have shown that mental health clinicians are not immune to negative attitudes toward patients with BPD. For example, a recent study of 710 mental health professionals (psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers, and nurses) found that many psychiatrists held negative attitudes toward patients with BPD and reported being “less likely to hospitalize a patient with BPD than a patient with major depressive disorder.”

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2 Comments

  • Laura

    I work with teenagers who have (or likely will be) diagnosed with BPD teaching DBT group skills. Most of my graduate research work has involved DBT in the BPD and forensic contexts. I have noticed a great deal of reluctance to work with this clinical population. Yet I find this work to be enormously rewarding and enriching. Most of the girls I work with have experienced (and are experiencing) severe emotional pain and/or past history of trauma. It’s really quite something to watch them grow and develop and learn adaptive ways to cope. The consultation team process (as proposed by Linehan) specifically targets therapist burn-out by using a team approach to treatment planning.

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