Details

Personality Disorders and Older Adults


Personality Disorders and Older Adults

Diagnosis, Assessment, and Treatment
1. Aufl.

von: Daniel L. Segal, Frederick L. Coolidge, Erlene Rosowsky

60,99 €

Verlag: Wiley
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 18.07.2006
ISBN/EAN: 9780470037683
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 352

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Beschreibungen

The older adult population is booming in the United State and across the globe. With this boom comes an increase in the number of older adults who experience psychological disorders. Current estimates suggest that about 20% of older persons are diagnosable with a mental disorder: Personality disorders are among the most poorly understood, challenging, and frustrating of these disorders among older adults. This book is designed to provide scholarly and scientifically-based guidance about the diagnosis, assessment, and treatment of personality disorders to health professionals, mental health professionals, and senior service professionals who encounter personality-disordered or "difficult" older adults.
<b>Foreword.</b> <p><b>Preface.</b></p> <p><b>Acknowledgments.</b></p> <p><b>Chapter 1. Introduction to Personality Disorders and Aging.</b></p> <p>The Demographics of Aging.</p> <p>Mental Health and Aging: The Big Picture.</p> <p>Overview of Personality and Personality Disorder.</p> <p>History of the Personality Disorder Category.</p> <p>Modern Conceptualizations.</p> <p>The <i>DSM-IV-TR</i> Personality Disorders.</p> <p>Challenges Associated with Personality Disorder Psychopathology.</p> <p>Conclusions.</p> <p>About This Book.</p> <p><b>Chapter 2. The Odd and Eccentric (Cluster A) Personality Disorders and Aging.<br /> </b></p> <p>General Diagnostic Criteria.</p> <p>Cluster A Personality Disorders: Paranoid, Schizoid, and Schizotypal.</p> <p>Paranoid Personality Disorder.</p> <p>Schizoid Personality Disorder.</p> <p>Schizotypal Personality Disorder.</p> <p><b>Chapter 3. The Dramatic, Emotional, and Erratic (Cluster B) Personality Disorders and Aging.</b></p> <p>Cluster B Personality Disorders: Antisocial, Borderline, Histrionic, and Narcissistic.</p> <p>Antisocial Personality Disorder.</p> <p>Borderline Personality Disorder.</p> <p>Histrionic Personality Disorder.</p> <p>Narcissitic Personality Disorder.</p> <p><b>Chapter 4. The Fearful or Anxious (Cluster C) Personality Disorders and Aging.</b></p> <p>Cluster C Personality Disorders: Avoidant, Dependent, and Obsessive-Compulsive.</p> <p>Avoidant Personality Disorder.</p> <p>Dependent Personality Disorder.</p> <p>Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder.</p> <p><b>Chapter 5. Other Personality Disorders and Aging: Sadistic, Self-Defeating, Depressive, Passive-Aggressive, and Inadequate.</b></p> <p>Personality Disorders in <i>DSM-III-R</i> Appendix A and in <i>DSM-IV-TR</i> Appendix B.</p> <p>Sadistic Personality Disorder: <i>DSM-III-R</i> Appendix A.<br /> <br /> Self-Defeating Personality Disorder: <i>DSM-III-R</i>  Appendix A.</p> <p>Depressive Personality Disorder: <i>DSM-IV-TR</i>  Appendix B.</p> <p>Passive-Aggressive Personality Disorder: <i>DSM-IV-TR</i> Appendix B.</p> <p>Inadequate Personality Disorder—A Manifestation of Frontal Lobe Syndrome?</p> <p>Inadequate Personality Disorder.</p> <p><b>Chapter 6. Epidemiology and Comorbidity.</b></p> <p>Epidemiology of Personality Disorders in Later Adult Life.</p> <p>Community and Psychiatric Samples.</p> <p>The Debate about Stability versus Change for the Personality Disorders.</p> <p>Epidemiology and Gender.</p> <p>Course and Prognosis for the Personality Disorders.</p> <p>Comorbidity: General Issues.</p> <p>Comorbidity of Personality Disorders with Clinical Disorders and with other Personality Disorders.</p> <p>Personality Disorders and Dementia.</p> <p>Conclusions.</p> <p><b>Chapter 7. Theories of Personality Disorders: Cognitive, Psychoanalytic, and Interpersonal.</b></p> <p>Cognitive Theories of Personality Disorders.</p> <p>Cognitive Therapy Basics.</p> <p>Application to Personality Disorders.</p> <p>Psychoanalytic Theories of Personality Disorders.</p> <p>Provinces and Instincts of the Psyche.</p> <p>Neuroses, Psychoses, and Personality Disorders.</p> <p>Psychoanalytic Theory and Aging.</p> <p>A Brief Note about the Humanistic Approach.</p> <p>Interpersonal Theories of Personality Disorders.<br /> <br /> Horney’s Interpersonal View of the Personality, Personality Disorders, and the Basic Conflict.</p> <p>Horney’s Description of Types.</p> <p>The Resolution of Neurotic Conflict.</p> <p>Horney, Feminist Psychology, and Humanism.</p> <p>Horney, Aging, and Personality Disorders.</p> <p>Conclusions.</p> <p><b>Chapter 8. Theories of Personality Disorders: Evolutionary and Neurobiological.</b></p> <p>Evolutionary Theories of Personality Disorders.</p> <p>Basic Concepts of Evolutionary Theory.</p> <p>Application to Antisocial, Histrionic, Narcissistic, Dependent, and Avoidant Personality Disorders.</p> <p>Application to Borderline Personality Disorder.</p> <p>Application to Paranoid Personality Disorder.</p> <p>Application to Schizoid, Schizotypal, and Avoidant Personality Disorders.</p> <p>Neurobiological Theories of Personality Disorders.</p> <p>Conclusions.</p> <p><b>Chapter 9. Assessment.</b></p> <p>Chart/Records Review.</p> <p>The Clinical Interview of the Patient.</p> <p>Interview with Informants.</p> <p>Self-Report Objective Personality Instruments.</p> <p>Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory-III.</p> <p>Personality Diagnostic Questionnaire-Fourth Edition Plus.</p> <p>Coolidge Axis II Inventory.</p> <p>Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory-2.</p> <p>NEO Personality Inventory-Revised.</p> <p>Application of Personality Inventorieswith Older Adults.</p> <p>Semi-Structured Clinical Interview.<br /> <br /> Structured Interview for <i>DSM-IV</i> Personality.</p> <p>International Personality Disorder Examination.</p> <p>Structured Clinical Interview for <i>DSM-IV</i> Axis II Personality Disorders.</p> <p>Personality Disorder Interview-IV 258</p> <p>Diagnostic Interview for <i>DSM-IV</i> Personality Disorders.</p> <p>Application of Semi-Structured Interviews with Older Adults.</p> <p>Conclusions.</p> <p><b>Chapter 10. Treatment: General Issues and Models.</b></p> <p>Core Features of Personality Disorder Affecting Treatment.</p> <p>Reliance on Primitive Defenses.</p> <p>Rigidity of Character Structure and Limited Repertoire.</p> <p>Effect on Others.</p> <p>Course of Personality Disorders.</p> <p>Routes into Treatment.</p> <p>Function of Buffering.</p> <p>Function of Bolstering.</p> <p>Function of Binding.</p> <p>An Essential Caveat.</p> <p>Goals of Treatment.</p> <p>Invisibility of Personality Disorders.</p> <p>What (Little) Is Known.</p> <p>Comorbidity of Axis I and Axis II Disorders.</p> <p>Understanding the Comorbidity.</p> <p>Treatments and Therapies.</p> <p>Somatic Treatments.</p> <p>Psychological Treatments.</p> <p>Countertransference.</p> <p>Guideposts for Treatment Planning and Goal Setting.</p> <p>Understanding the Phenomenology of Personality Disorders and Helping Guide Treatment.</p> <p>Patterns of Attachment.</p> <p>Inside and Outside Feeders.</p> <p>Rules of Personality Disorders.</p> <p>Illusion of Uniqueness.</p> <p><b>Chapter 11. The “Goodness of Fit” Model and Its Implications for Treatment.</b></p> <p>“Goodness of Fit” Model.</p> <p>Trait Template.</p> <p>Utility of a Personality Trait Model.</p> <p>Implications of the Goodness of Fit Model for Designing a Treatment Plan.</p> <p><b>References.</b></p> <p><b>Author Index.</b></p> <p><b>Subject Index.</b></p>
"The foreword describes this book as the best of its kind in the field of personality disorders of the elderly. I fully agree and recommend it to practitioners, researchers, and educators. It should be required reading for graduate students in psychology and for those preparing for careers in mental health. It really is an outstanding book!"<br /> —Norman Abeles (<i>PsycCRITIQUES</i>, August 15, 2007) <p>"The authors have provided a useful guide to understanding and treating older patients." (<i>The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease</i>, volume 195, No 8, August 2007)</p>
<b>DANIEL L. SEGAL</b>, PhD, is an Associate Professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs. He teaches courses in clinical psychology, conducts research on mental health and aging, and trains students in clinical geropsychology at the CU Aging Center. <p><b>FREDERICK L. COOLIDGE</b>, PhD, is a Professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs. His research focuses on behavioral genetics and personality disorders across the lifespan.</p> <p><b>ERLENE ROSOWSKY</b>, PsyD, is an Assistant Clinical Professor in Psychology in the Department of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and is the Director of the Center for Mental Health and Aging at the Massachusetts School of Professional Psychology. Dr. Rosowsky writes a regular column for the Journal of Retirement Planning.</p>
<b>Praise for <i>Personality Disorders and Older Adults</i></b> <p>The authors have presented a valuable addition to the literature of geropsychology, a clinically relevant work whose virtues are its comprehensiveness, ease of understanding, and simplicity of expression.<br /> —Theodore Millon, PhD, DSc, Dean and Scientific Director Institute for Advanced Studies in Personology and Psychopathology</p> <p>...a "must-have" for all clinicians working with this population and an important resource for students and trainees.<br /> —Bob Knight, PhD, University of Southern California</p> <p>...[this book] should be on the bookshelf of all mental health professionals who work with "problem" clients in geriatric settings, and of all academics who want to understand the latest thinking on aging, personality, and dysfunction.<br /> —Victor Molinari, PhD, ABPPLouis de la Parte Florida Mental Health Institute University of South Florida</p> <p>...this volume is a much-needed state-of-the-art compendium for both clinicians and researchers.<br /> —Michael Duffy, PhDTexas A&M University</p> <p><b>Improving quality of life for older adults with personality disorders</b></p> <p>This book provides a theorized pattern for each personality disorder in later life. It examines the potential impact of aging on each of the personality disorders and offers extended case examples for odd and eccentric, dramatic and erratic, and fearful and anxious personality disorders as well as other personality disorders that affect older adults: sadistic, self-defeating, depressive, passive-aggressive, and inadequate. The authors offer guidance based on scholarly research and scientific evidence. The book covers epidemiology and comorbidity, theories of personality disorders, assessment, and intervention strategies.</p> <p>Personality disorder represents a tough and often frustrating challenge for clinicians. On top of this already challenging clinical situation, managing older patients entails contending with the physical and cognitive declines, social losses, reduced independence, and financial strains associated with the aging process. Armed with a better understanding of this very challenging clinical population, readers can help personality-disorderedolder adults age more gracefully and successfully, and help improve their quality of life.</p>
The chapter on evolutionary theory and the development of personality disorders is especially creative and cutting-edge. "Personality Disorders and Older Adults" should be on the bookshelf of all mental health professionals who work with ‘problem’ clients in geriatric settings, and of all academics who want to understand the latest thinking on personality and dysfunction.--Victor Molinari, University of South Florida

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