This document provides an overview of borderline personality disorder (BPD), including its history, characteristics, theories about its etiology, relationship to other disorders, treatment approaches, and cross-cultural research. It traces the early conceptualizations of personality types and disorders. BPD was introduced in the 1930s to describe patients with severe symptoms not fitting neurotic or psychotic categories. It was included as a diagnosis in the DSM-III in 1980. The document discusses psychodynamic, cognitive, biological, and environmental theories of BPD's causes. It also examines BPD's links to PTSD and antisocial personality disorder in terms of impulsivity, affective instability, and cognitive symptoms. Treatments mentioned include cognitive
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Borderline Personality Disorder
This document provides an overview of borderline personality disorder (BPD), including its history, characteristics, theories about its etiology, relationship to other disorders, treatment approaches, and cross-cultural research. It traces the early conceptualizations of personality types and disorders. BPD was introduced in the 1930s to describe patients with severe symptoms not fitting neurotic or psychotic categories. It was included as a diagnosis in the DSM-III in 1980. The document discusses psychodynamic, cognitive, biological, and environmental theories of BPD's causes. It also examines BPD's links to PTSD and antisocial personality disorder in terms of impulsivity, affective instability, and cognitive symptoms. Treatments mentioned include cognitive
Abstract Criteria for diagnosing borderline personality disorders have been changing ever since the term has been introduced in psychological theory and practice. It is often discussed its relation to other personality disorders as well as its etiology. As the prevalence of this disorder grew bigger, the need for deeper understanding the phenomenology, etiology and implications for treatment of borderline personality disorder emerged. Dominant explanations of the nature of borderline personality disorder originated from psychodynamic theories which emphasized early development as an essential factor for the development of this disorder. Other theories and perspectives on the causes of borderline personality disorder have emerged, but there is still a question of effective treatment of this disorder. On the other hand, there has been growing interest of researching borderline personality concept in different cultures and validating the results of American and European studies on Eastern cultures. This paper had the goal to present the development of the concept of borderline personality disorder, to determine its characteristics in terms of diagnosis and phenomenology, to give perspective on its causes and treatment and to present findings of studies in Asia regarding borderline personality disorders.
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History of borderline personality disorder The history of personality categorization can be traced to the early Greeks and character writing originating in Athens. These depictions of characters were sketches that described common types of characters, emphasising a dominant trait as a way of explaining a flaw or foible of an individual. In 4 th century B. C., Hippocrates identified four basic temperaments associating each with the dominant body fluid. Centuries later, Galen associated Hippocratess choleric temperament with a tendency towards irascibility, sanguine temperament with optimism, melancholic with sadness and phlegmatic temperament with apathetic disposition (Millon & Davis, 1995). In 18 th century, Gall argued that intensity and character of thoughts and emotion correlate with variations in the size and shape of the brain or its encasement, the cranium. Pinel observed patients who engaged in impulsive and self-damaging acts although their reasoning abilities were unimpaired. He referred to it as la folie raisonnante. He described cases of insanity without delirium and was the first to recognize that madness does not signify the presence of a deficit in reasoning powers. Rush depicted individuals with lucidity of thoughts and socially deranged behaviours. (Millon & Davis, 1995). In early 20 th century, people with personality disorders were viewed as, as Scneider described them, a set of psychopathic personalities which co-occurred with other psychiatric disorders (Oldham, 2009). Kraepelin formulated a number of subaffective personality conditions, similar to current borderline personality disorder; those included excitable personality, mixture of fundamental states, extraordinarily great fluctuations in emotional equilibrium; they are easily moved by their experiences, their mood is a subject to frequent change, give expression to thoughts of suicide; they are mostly very distractible and unsteady in their endeavours, they make sudden resolves and carry them out on the spot, run off abruptly, go abruptly, enter a cloister (Kraepelin, 1921, pp. 130-131, in Krawitz & Jackson, 2008). The term borderline personality disorder was first introduced in 1930s by Adolph Stern (1938, in Gunderson & Links, 2008) in order to identify groups of clients who did not fit into usual categorization at the time. People were diagnosed as either neurotic, involving what we now refer to as anxiety and depressive disorders, or psychotic, involving bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, as we now refer them. In spite of the dominant categories of neurotic and 6
psychotic symptoms, clinicians recognized many patients suffering from severe emotional distress or experiencing social or occupational impairment due to the symptoms they experienced. Their pathology did not involve frank psychosis or other syndromes characterized with depressive episodes, persistent anxiety or dementia (Oldham, 2009). Patients from this uncategorized group expressed symptoms of neurotic category, but did not respond to the usual treatment of neurotic disorders at the time. They had occasional psychotic or psychotic-like experiences, but they were not sufficient to categorize them into psychotic category. Patients with most severe and disabling symptoms were referred to long- term inpatient treatment or outpatient psychoanalysis or psychoanalytically oriented psychotherapy (Oldham, 2009). From the context of World War II the need for standardized psychiatric diagnosis emerged. War department developed a document labelled Technical Bulletin 203, representing a psychoanalytically oriented system of terminology for classifying mental illness precipitated by stress. Together with APA experts, diagnostic manual for psychiatric diagnoses was developed. (Oldham, 2009). It was the framework for the first edition of DSM. DSM I presented a general view on personality disorders which persisted to the presence. Personality behaviours were viewed as more or less permanent patterns of behaviour and human interaction, established b early adulthood and unlikely to change throughout the life cycle (Oldham, 2009, p. 6). Borderline personality disorder first appeared in DSM III manual in 1980s, together with narcissistic personality disorder. The criteria for defining borderline personality disorder emphasised emotional dysregulation, unstable interpersonal relationships and loss of impulse control more than cognitive distortions and marginal reality testing, which were more characteristic of schizotypal personality disorder (Oldham, 2009, p. 8). Grinker et al. (1968, in Gunderson & Links, 2008, p. 3) argued that borderline psychopathology is a by product of social changes during the twentieth century. The earlier burdens of manual labour and the earlier restrictions of travel, communication and leisure time may have offered the structure, survival activities, and monitors that silently kept such psychopathology in check. DSM IV finally defined nine criteria for borderline personality disorder diagnosis. They include: a) disturbed relationships; 2) abandonment fears; 3) chronic feelings of emptiness; 4) affective instability; 5) inappropriate, intense anger or lack of control of anger; 6) impulsivity in at least two potential self-damaging activities; 7) suicidal or self-mutilating behaviour; 8) 7
identity disturbance; 9) transient, stress related paranoid ideation or severe dissociation symptoms (Gunderson & Links, 2008). There is a growing debate about the appropriateness of use of categorical or dimensional system of classifications, relevant criteria for diagnosing it and its association to other personality disorders. Characteristics of borderline patients Borderline patients lack of self-soothing capacities derived from the ability of a child to internalize nurturing caregivers and sooth themselves even when the caregivers are not present. Lack of those abilities creates a tendency of evoking intense feelings of loneliness and panic through the life of borderline individual. Herman (1997, in Braid, 2008) describes the relationships of individuals who survived severe childhood abuse. These relationships involve intense periods of searching for intimacy and idealization of the other person, alternating with periods of angry withdrawal and denigration. They are driven by the need for care and fear of abandonment and betrail. When disappointed, they furiously denigrate the person they idealized and adored. Even minor disappointments tend to evoke childhood experiences of neglect and cruelty (Braid, 2008). The lack of evocative memory, the ability to recall memories of comforting and secure love relationship leaves them dependent on real care and assurance from others. The experience of abandonment can become so intense that the patient feels that they cannot survive without the relationship (Judd & McGlashan, 2008). Characteristic assumptions of borderline patients involve the idea that people are dangerous and malignant figures, the idea of them being powerless and vulnerable and the idea that they are inherently bad and unacceptable to both self and others. Following these ideas, patient does not dare to trust others, and themselves cannot be trusted either (Arntz, 1993).. Borderline patients are obsessed with the potential rejection or abandonment; they are in need to be with others in order to be able to perceive themselves. They use others as mirrors of their self-perception (Dobbert, 2007, p. 66). Persons afflicted with borderline personality disorder are prone to perceive relationships with others as intimate very early. Their 8
relationships are unstable due to borderliners delusional beliefs of enduring love or friendship which ends as soon as their expectations are not fulfilled. Borderline personality disorder is characterized with identity disturbances which might be expressed through radical changes in styles of dressing, attitudes, social preferences and hobbies (Dobbert, 2007). Their thinking style is, one-dimensional and childish, and the evaluations black-and-white due to undeveloped cognitive powers (Arntz, 1993). When borderline individuals feel deprived or betrayed they experience anger and anxiety that activate coercive and controlling attachment behaviours (Judd & McGlashan, 2008, p. 189). They employ splitting mechanisms during these states which prevent them composing opposite feelings and thoughts about the other person. Etiology Psychodynamic approach Psychoanalytic theories were the first to generate a concept of personality disorder. Personality disorders began to draw attention of psychoanalysis because of their resistance to psychoanalytic treatment and explanation methods. Freuds view on psychological problems in terms of conflict and defence mechanisms was not suitable enough to explain the origin of personality disorders and most analytic theorists have turned to ego psychology. Ego psychologists describe personality disorders as states of various deficits in functioning, such as poor impulse control and affect regulation and deficits in the capacity for self-reflection. Stern (1938, in Porder, 1993) suggested that failures in early mothering are related to the pathological narcissism of the borderline individual, providing a soil for the other pathology to emerge. Disturbances in early childhood are causes of anxiety, idealisation tendencies and childlike self-image. He described features of borderline personality disorders which involved narcissism created as a self-perserving function, leading to psychotic-like transference, lack of maternal affection, parental quarrels, outbursts direct at child, early divorce, separation or desertion, cruelty, brutality and neglect by parents over many years duration (Baird, 2008). Greenacre (1971, in Porder, 1993) argued that trauma in the first two years of life could have interfered with ego development. Mahler and Furer (1968) suggested that there was a period of vulnerability in early childhood the separation-individuation phase; disturbances in this period could be related to borderline phenomena. Mothers 9
resistance towards individuation created pathological regressive bond between borderline individuals and their mothers (Porder, 1993). Otto Kernberg (1975a, 1984, 1996, in Heim & Western, 2009) developed a theory of personality organisation in which he proposed a continuum from chronically psychotic levels of functioning, through borderline functioning as severe personality disorders, through neurotic to normal functioning. What distinguishes individuals with borderline disorders from the ones with neurotic disorders is their regulation of emotions through immature, reality- distorting defences such as denial and projection (primitive defences), and their difficulties in forming mature multifaceted representations of themselves and significant others (identity diffusion) (Heim & Western, 2009). Developmentalists suggest that borderline pathology is a result of defect in development of early object relations. Internalization of hostile, abusive, critical, inconsistent or neglectful parents creates children vulnerable to fears of abandonment, self-hatred and tendency to treat themselves as their parents treated them (Heim & Western, 2009). Winnicott (1953/1958, 1960/1965) developed concepts which contributed in later treatment of borderline patients. These concepts include transitional objects and transitional phenomena and the holding environment. Transitional object and transitional phenomena concept refers to the childs ability to imagine me/not me. This concept had implications on relation between patient and therapist and it is considered that it represents a developmental basis for the ability of the patient to use transference during therapy. The holding environment represents a safe and protected place where the child can be alone or alone with others, a space that usually good mother provides (Porder, 1993). Developmentalists consider that borderline occurs early in childhood, starting with extreme anxiety and primitive defences that protect the integrity of ego. Object relationships are immature and incapable of maintaining stable sense of self or identity. The border between self and the outside world is blurry and the perception of reality damaged (Porder, 1993). There is a high correlation between the level of borderline psychopathology and the severity of childhood trauma (Baird, 2008). 10
Cognitive-social theories Cognitive-social theorists believe that learning is the basis of personality and that personality dispositions are shaped by their consequences. Environmental influences and individuals information processing about self and world are the basis for building personality (Heim & Western, 2009). Personality disorders are interpreted in light of the schemas, expectancies, goals, skills, competencies and self-regulation. Dysfunctional schemas lead patients with personality disorders to misinterpreting information, encoding information in biased ways or view themselves as bad or incompetent. Borderline patients are prone to misinterpreting peoples intentions and have troubles with self-regulation, including specific skills. According to Linehan, emotion dysregulation is the essential feature of borderline personality disorder. Emotion dysregulation include difficulties in a) inhibiting inappropriate behaviour related to intense affect, b) organizing oneself to meet behavioural goals, 3) regulating physiological arousal associated with intense emotional arousal and 4) refocusing attention when emotionally stimulated. These difficulties lead to disturbances in interpersonal relationships and in developing stable sense of identity (Heim & Western, 2009).
Genetic and biological factors Past two decades, genetic disposition for borderline personality disorder has been studied. In one twin study, the heritability of 0.69 for borderline personality disorder was found and overall heritability of 0.60 for DSM IV Cluster B personality disorders. The heredity of the disorder expresses itself through traits of affective instability, impulsivity, self-harm and identity problems. Case histories also provide evidence of presence of Cluster B disorders and traits in patients families (Judd & McGlashan, 2008). Andrulonis et al. (1980, in Judd & McGlashan, 2008) found wide range of problems with brain functioning in borderline patients, including episodic dyscontrol, neurological dysfunction, epilepsy, minimal brain dysfunction and learning disabilities. Study of Kimble et al. (1997, in Judd & McGlashan, 2008, p. 9) found neurological vulnerability of borderline 11
patients in 87,5% , with a high occurrence of childhood speech/language disturbance, learning disabilities, ADHD and reported complications of birth and pregnancy. Affect and impulse dysregulation are attributed to altered functioning of central serotonergic system, while suicide and self-injurious behaviour are attributed to lower levels of 5-HT and abnormalities in dopaminergic system. These behaviour patterns were established to correlate with severe traumatic stress in childhood, such as physical and sexual abuse (Judd & McGlashan, 2008). Environmental factors There is an increase in prevalence of parasuicide and completed suicide in youth diagnosed with borderline personality disorder. This fact could be interpreted by the breakdown in traditional structures which guides the development of young people. Impulsive disorders such as borderline, are particularly responsive to social context and the structure and limits it provides. Traditional societies are defined as having high social cohesion, fixed social roles and high interpersonal continuity which provide framework for building sense of identity and the feeling of belonging (Paris, 2007). Individuals with borderline personality disorders act impulsively as a way to handle their emotional dysregulation. Linehan (1993, Paris, 2007) suggested that impulsive behaviours decrease in patients with borderline personality disorder in the conditions with social support. Stress diathesis model In stress diathesis model, every category of mental disorder is associated with certain genetic vulnerability. Genes shape individuals vulnerability, temperament and traits. Traits become maladaptive in certain environmental conditions, meaning that diathesis becomes apparent when uncovered by stressors. The interaction between diathesis and stressors is bidirectional: genetic predispositions determine the way people react on the stimuli in their environment, while the stressors and environmental factors in general determine what genetic dispositions would be uncovered 12
Borderline personality disorders and other psychological disorders Borderline and post-traumatic stress disorder It is often discussed whether borderline personality disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder are synonymous because of the central role of the trauma in their development. These disorders often occur together and have similar symptoms. However, there are certain distinctions. Individuals with PTSD have relatively accurate memories of the traumatic event, while borderline individuals have experienced trauma in early age when such memories might have not survived. Trauma in early childhood may induce symptoms similar to those in PTSD. However, these symptoms become transformed and incorporated into the personality structure because of the childs inability to process and integrate information (Judd & McGlashan, 2008). Borderline and antisocial personality disorder Applying cluster analysis to the symptoms of borderline personality disorder, Hurt et al. (Paris, 1997) found three underlying dimensions: impulsivity, affective instability and cognitive deficits. Livesley and Schroeder (Paris, 1997) also found the same three dimensions including the fourth: identity diffusion. Impulsivity There is a significant overlap between impulsivity of patients with borderline and antisocial personality disorder. Borderline individuals sometimes demonstrate petty theft, substance abuse, dangerous driving or high risk sexual activities as primitive defences from the intense feelings of anxiety. Those characteristics are defining features of antisocial personality disorder. However, impulsivity has different background within these disorders. Antisocial patients use people and discard them after they no longer need them, while borderline patients tend to discard others after, as they perceive it, being betrayed and disappointed by them. Antisocial patients exploit others, while borderline patients tend to be exploited. Antisocial patients lack of concern for their victims, while borderline patients are likely to comply with others (Paris, 1997). 13
Affective instability Borderline patients suffer from continuous dysphoria which makes them highly responsive to their environment. They use impulsive actions as distraction from dysphoric emotions. Antisocial patients express dysphoric mood when they are prevented from acting out (Paris, 1997). Both antisocial and borderline patients seem to use their maladaptive behavioural patterns to avoid dysphoric emotions. Cognitive symptoms Borderline and antisocial personality disorder differ in symptoms that involve auditory hallucinations, subdelusional paranoid trends, mycropsychoses or chronic depersonalization and derealisation experiences. Although not systematically studied on antisocial patients, it is considered that these symptoms are used to help them escape from criminal charges (Paris, 1997).
According to Paris (2000) gender influence provides the explanation of differences between types of personality disorders from cluster B. Borderline and antisocial disorder have common family histories and impulsivity as phenomenological distinction. Paris argues that both borderline and antisocial disorder could represent alternate versions of the same trait pathology with symptoms specific to gender (Paris, 2000, p. 79). Exploitive behaviour and aggressivity typical for antisocial disorder is more common in men, while the aggression against self and self-destructive behaviour typical for borderline patients is more common in women. Patients in child psychiatric are usually boys, mainly because of their behavioural disruptions that lead to referral. Paris argues that is likely that girls experience the same intensity of distress, but tend to develop more internalizing then externalizing symptoms. Boys are more likely to develop antisocial behaviour at earlier age, while girls are more likely to develop borderline personality disorder later in life, which would explain the dominance of male patients on child psychiatric. Both boys and girls have history of conduct disorder during childhood (Paris, 2000).
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Psychotherapeutic treatment Cognitive-behavioural treatment Perhaps the most difficult thing in treating borderline patients is constructing a working relationship. The contact between the patient and the therapist is dominated by ambivalent feelings, including a desire for help and acceptance in one hand and the feeling of being hurt and rejected. Therefore, it is hard to determine and follow the goals and methods of the therapy. The patients inability to trust others can create severe difficulties for the therapy process. The therapist might feel discouraged, but they need to realize that the patients behaviour is the reflection of their problem. Trust cannot be enforced by discussion or convincing the patient; empathetic reation to the problem, consistent and congruent behaviour are crucial in developing trusting relationship (Arntz, 1993). Emphasis in cognitive-behavioural therapy is on banishing symptoms or making them more bearable. In long-term, the goal is to cope with emotions more adequately, modify thinking errors, and in the end, to process trauma and change their core schemas. Modifying thinking patterns can be accomplished by introducing standard cognitive techniques, such as cognitive diary. Socratic questioning can be used for deriving information and moving the patient to the desired goal, but without triggering intense emotional responses before the patient is ready (Fusco & Apsche, 2005). Changing core schemas and processing trauma cannot be done easily. Therapist needs to clarify the context of the trauma and to approach patients memories and emotions slowly, with caution in order to help the patient to release their fears and at the same time maintain the control over their experiences (Arntz, 1993). Layden et al. (1993, in Fusco & Apsche, 2005) described characteristic maladaptive schema in borderline patients involving dependence, lack of individuation, emotional deprivation, abandonment, mistrust, unlovability and incompetence. These schemas produce cognitive distortions such as dichotomous thinking and catastrophizing and lead to significant dysfunction of the patient. Techniques such as Cognitive conceptualization diagram and the Incident chart are used for identifying schemas and organizing their impact on patients functioning (Fusco & Apsche, 2005). 15
Psychodynamic therapy When treating patients with borderline personality disorder, therapists deal with the challenge of handling patients struggle with interpersonal closeness and resistance which might be expressed through acting out, intense negative affects and regressive and self- destructive behaviours (Waldinger & Gunderson, 1989). It is necessary to identify self- destructive nature of patients maladaptive behaviour and to confront the patient with the fact that self-destructive behaviour is their way of dealing with intense and intolerable affects. According to Kerneberg (Waldinger & Gunderson, 1989), it is necessary to interpret negative transference and maladaptive defences and to clarify contradictory ego states early in treatment. Clarifying misunderstanding of the therapists interpretation, usually evolved by the patients projections, can help the patient to replace primitive defences by the higher-level defences in order to strengthen their ego and diminish distortions in interpersonal relationships. Masterson sees transference as the reflection of the patients primary relationships (Waldinger & Gunderson, 1989, p. 14). After the acting out is controlled, the therapists helps patient to differentiate between the current reality of therapy and transference distortions based on real pas experiences by using interpretations. Adler (1979, in Waldinger & Gunderson, 1989) argues that patients longing for a perfect caregiver is the thing that holds borderline patient in therapy and that early interpretation would only disrupt the relationship with the therapist and the patients motivation for treatment. Transference based psychoanalytic therapies suggest facilitation of reactivating split-off internalized object relations and idealized natures that are then observed and interpreted in transference. The patient is instructed to carry out free associations, while the therapists focuses on observing activation of regressive, split-off relations in the transference, identyfing them and interpreting them. These interpretations are based on the assumption that each split off object relation is a part of dyadic unit of self-representation, object- representation and a dominant affect linking them. Activation of these dyadic relationships forms the patients perception of the therapist, who might be perceived as object- representation in one point, while the patient identifies with primitive self-object or vice versa in another point of therapy session. The final goal of the therapy is to associate positive and negative transferences, integrate mutually split off idealized and persecutory segments with the corresponding resolution of identity diffusion (Williams, 2011). 16
Borderline personality disorder across cultures
Mental disorders express themselves with different symptoms in each culture. Some disorders are seen only in specific social settings. Personality disorders are particularly socially sensitive because they refer to behaviours and feelings that are learned in certain culture setting. Moriya et al. (1993) conducted a clinical study of the borderline personality disorder in Asia involving 85 female outpatients from Japan, 32 of them diagnosed with borderline personality disorder. The results showed that there is a psychopathological entity equivalent to borderline personality disorder from USA in Asia, or at least in Japan. Japanese patients scored approximately the same on anger and self-mutilating behaviour as American patients. They scored less on substance abuse and drug induced psychotic experiences than Americans. Japanese borderline patients showed tendency toward stormy or masochistic relationships, and that few of them were independent (Moriya et al., 1993). Moriya argues that it is due to the fact that most of the patients in Japan live with their parents and continue to have such relationships with them, while American patients of that age live away from their parents. Bateman (1989) conducted a preliminary study of the borderline patients in Britain in order to determine whether British patients fit into American diagnosis criteria presented in DSM classifications. The results of the study showed that patients diagnosed with American criteria have particular symptom profile which is not classified easily in any specific diagnostic category used in Britain (Bateman, 1989). When conducting cross-cultural studies on psychopathological disorders, it is always a question whether diagnostic criteria suits the characteristics of the culture involved and their terms of normality and sanity. Instruments used in the research represent another threat to validity of the results of the study and their implications. 17
Conclusion Borderline personality disorder concept still needs to be investigated in order to provide complete image of this disorder, the criteria for diagnosing it and differentiate it from other psychological disorders in childhood. Demographic factors such as gender and age should be further explored in context of borderline personality disorders in order to determine its prevalence and critical age for developing the disorder. Many factors influence developing personality disorders, among which are genes and biological vulnerability, childhood trauma or disturbed psychological development, parental figures and social factors including persons environment and cultural influences. All these factors must be taken into account when discussing borderline personality. If genetic material, diathesis and biological vulnerability cannot be changed, childs development, family relationships and environment are the factors that could be influenced on by each individual and the whole society in order to create a healthy context for growing up and achieving personal well-being. Social support system has to be provided for individuals suffering from this disorder and their environment in order to be able to handle the distress and behavioural changes the patient experiences. Information about the borderline personality disorder need to be available, so that individuals experiencing emotional disturbances could identify the nature of their disturbances and seek appropriate help. Parents need to be educated in area of child psychological functioning in order to prevent or recognize symptoms of any kind of disturbances and start with treatment on time. Psychotherapy for patients with personality disorders still represents a challenge. Identifying the best approach for each individual and developing a trusting relationship is difficult, especially if it is a patient with borderline personality disorder. Trust issues, idealization and deep disappointments, mood changes and behavioural inconsistency can pose great obstacle for progress in therapy. The therapist has to be cautious in approaching them and uncovering the potential trauma they experienced so they do not disrupt patients involvement in therapeutic process. 18
And finally, cultural context of the borderline personality disorder needs to be studied in different cultures, in order to establish the impact of culture on development of personality disorders. There are few studies comparing borderline symptoms and phenomenology in Eastern and Western societies. Common diagnosis criteria and instruments need to be established, so the findings regarding etiological, phenomenological and treatment issues could be applied in different societies.
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