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Academic Specialist Registrar, Department of Psychological Medicine, Imperial College, London
Specialist Registrar, Central North West London Mental Health NHS Trust, London
Research Associate, Imperial College, London
Assistant Statistician, Imperial College, London
Professor, Department of Psychological Medicine, Imperial College, St Dunstans Road, London W6 8RP
None.
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Abstract |
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The aim was to record the prevalence, type and severity of personality disorder dealt with by an inner-city outreach team. Patients on the register of an assertive outreach team were approached and asked to give informed consent for an informant interview with their principal worker to determine their personality status, using the informant-based ICD10 version of the Personality Assessment Schedule.
RESULTS
Of the 73 patients, 62 (85%) of whom had a psychotic diagnosis, 67 (92%) had at least one personality disorder, with 37 (51%) having complex or severe personality disorders.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
The findings suggest that the National Service Framework requirements for assertive outreach teams tend to select many patients with comorbid personality disorder in addition to other severe psychiatric disorders.
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Introduction |
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Knowledge of the prevalence of personality disorders in the community mental health teams is important for identifying treatment needs and for provision of psychiatric services. Personality disorder in people with severe mental illness is associated with adverse consequences, complicates treatment and worsens prognosis. Personality disorder is common in medical services, with a prevalence of around 30% in primary care attenders (Moran et al, 2002), over 50% among in-patients (Casey, 2000) and around 50% in community mental health teams (Keown et al, 2002).
Research in individuals with both severe mental illness and personality disorder is problematic because it is often difficult to separate symptoms caused by mental illness from those due to a personality disorder. The other consideration is that the presentation of psychiatric symptoms could be transformed by the presence of personality disorder. However, these difficulties can be minimised if the patients are well known and there is knowledge of function independent of major mental disorder.
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Method |
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In addition to the type of personality disorder, the severity of the disorder was determined using a standard method, with levels of no personality disorder, personality difficulty only, simple personality disorder (one or more personality disorders in one of the three cluster equivalents of DSM (flamboyant/dramatic, odd/eccentric and anxious/fearful)), complex personality disorder (personality disorders from more than one cluster) and severe personality disorder (complex personality disorders which create widespread and severe disruption of relationships, represent a threat to society and usually are associated with risk of violence) all recorded (Tyrer & Johnson, 1996; Tyrer, 2000, p. 129). A separate assessment of whether the patients were willing to have treatment separated those with type S (treatment-seeking) from type R (treatment-rejecting) personality disorders (Tyrer et al, 2003).
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Results |
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Table 1 shows the
distribution of personality disorder categories in the 67 patients identified
as having a personality disorder using the PASI. The PASI may
identify several personality disorders, but the one causing the greatest
social dysfunction is given primacy. Table
2 gives the distribution of personality disorders by severity.
Table 3 categorises the
patients personality disorders into type R (treatment-rejecting) and
type S (treatment-seeking). All comorbid personality disorders are included.
Analysis showed that the distribution of personality disorders is not random:
cluster C personality disorders have an excess of type S personalities and
clusters A and B have an excess of type R personalities
(
2=25.5, d.f.=8, P=0.0013).
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Discussion |
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The results also suggest that some of the special features required for eligibility for an assertive outreach team difficulty in engagement, frequent admissions and crisis presentation, antipathy to intervention might be at least as much a consequence of a personality disorder as of a resistant mental illness. The distinction between type R and type S disorders may be valuable in clinical practice, particularly for those contemplating treatment of patients who have a diagnosis of personality disorder, but the requirements of an assertive outreach team probably lead to a bias towards type R personalities.
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References |
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH (1999) A National Service Framework for Mental Health. London: Department of Health.
KEOWN, P., HOLLOWAY, F. & KUIPERS, E. (2002) The prevalence of personality disorders, psychotic disorders and affective disorders amongst the patients seen by a community mental health team in London. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 37, 225 -229.[CrossRef][Medline]
MERSON, S., TYRER, P., DUKE, P., et al (1994) Interrater reliability of KD10 guidelines for the diagnosis of personality disorders. Journal of Personality Disorders, 8, 89 -95.
MORAN, P., JENKINS, R., TYLEE, A., et al (2002) The prevalence of personality disorder among UK primary care attenders. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 102, 52-57.
NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR MENTAL HEALTH IN ENGLAND (2003) Personality Disorder: No Longer a Diagnosis of Exclusion. Leeds: NIMHE.
TYRER, P. (2000) Personality Assessment Schedule: PASI (ICD10 version). In Personality Disorders: Diagnosis, Management and Course (ed. P. Tyrer), pp. 160 -180. London: Arnold.
TYRER, P. & JOHNSON, T. (1996) Establishing the
severity of personality disorder. American Journal of
Psychiatry, 153, 1593
-1597.
TYRER, P. & SEIVEWRIGHT, H. (2000) Studies of outcome. In Personality Disorders: Diagnosis, Management and Course (2nd edn) (ed. P. Tyrer), pp. 119 -136. London: Arnold.
TYRER, P., STRAUSS, J. & CICCHETTI, D. (1983) Temporal reliability of personality in psychiatric patients. Psychological Medicine, 13, 393 -398.[Medline]
TYRER, P., MITCHARD, S., METHUEN, C., et al (2003) Treatment-rejecting and treatment-seeking personality disorders: Type R and Type S. Journal of Personality Disorders, 17, 265 -270.
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