Borderline Personality Disorder ( Adhd )

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According to the American Psychiatric Association (2013), it is estimated that nearly 1.6 percent of adults in the United States has borderline personality disorder (BPD), although rates may be as high as 5.9 percent of the United States’ adults, making BPD the most prevalent personality disorder (NAMI, 2016). Borderline personality disorder is a condition characterized by difficulties regulating emotion, or a long-lasting pattern of instability in one’s mood and interpersonal relationships (American Psychiatric Association [APA], 2013). Personality characteristics, like in BPD, are maladaptive in nature and individuals suffering from BPD often have extreme difficulties maintaining stable interpersonal relationships and experience severe mood swings that cause the individual to be oversensitive, impulsive, and hostile (Sanders-Dewer, Neva, Dewey, & Seth, 2016). Additionally, these individuals also tend to suffer from periods of emotional or behavioral instability along with continuous feelings of emptiness, which increases their propensity to abuse substances or engage in behaviors that are self-harming (Sanders-Dewer, Neva, Dewey, & Seth, 2016). Individuals with BPD are also more inclined to experience symptoms of additional psychopathological symptoms, and often times have comorbid diagnoses of depression, anxiety, substance use disorders, or other personality disorders like narcissistic personality disorder or antisocial personality disorder (Sanders-Dewer, Neva, Dewey, & Seth, 2016).
Furthermore, individuals with borderline personality disorder tend to be overrepresented within the prison population, which is likely related to the high risk individuals with borderline personality disorder have to engage in criminal or antisoci...

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... al., 2014). Moreover, it is not advised that anyone suffering from BPD should see their family physician or general practitioner, as they are generally not particularly well-equipper to make this type of psychological diagnosis, although it may be useful to get their opinion, or make a mental health recommendation (Bresset, 2016). An individual with borderline personality disorder will be diagnosed after a mental health professional conducts a comprehensive psychiatric interview, which may include speaking with previous clinicians, conducting medical evaluations, and holding interviews with friends and family members, if appropriate. Finally, the clinician will also need to determine whether the client’s symptoms meet the necessary criteria for a personality disorder diagnosis, and meet at least 5 of the 9 BPD symptoms listed in the DSM-5 (APA, 2013; Bresset, 2016).

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