Comparative treatments for borderline personality disorder /
[Book]
Arthur Freeman, Mark H. Stone, Donna Martin, editors.
New York, NY :
Springer,
2005.
1 online resource (ix, 303 pages) :
illustrations.
Springer series on comparative treatments for psychological disorders
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents; Contributors; Acknowledgments; 1. Introduction: A Review of Borderline Personality Disorder; 2. Case History of a Borderline Personality: Linda P.; 3. Self-Psychological Treatment; 4. Dialectical Behavior Therapy; 5. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy; 6. Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy; 7. Borderline States and Individual Psychology; 8. A Cognitive-Developmental Formulation of BPD; 9. A Lacanian Approach; 10. Imagery Rescripting and Reprocessing Therapy; 11. Unified Therapy with BPD; 12. Similarities and Differences in Treatment Modalities; Index.
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Within the field of clinical psychology, the term borderline personality disorder was developed to fulfill a diagnostic need and has come to possess specific stereotypes and negative meanings. Because the term borderline is an emotionally charged word, it can lead to a less-than-accurate view of the situation or patient being described, thus presenting a challenge to even the most experienced therapists and becoming one of the most complex disorders to treat. Through the use of one case study, however, experts in borderline personality disorders have put this difficulty at ease. Applying a var.
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Comparative treatments for borderline personality disorder.