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Explore the different clusters of personality disorders, common characteristics associated with each, suitable therapies, and medication classifications related to personality disorders. Learn about the nursing process for clients with personality disorders.
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Mental Health Nursing IINURS 2310 Unit 12 Personality Disorders
Objective 1 Exploring personality disorders and the common characteristics associated with each
Personality = the totality of emotional and behavioral characteristics that are particular to a specific person and that remain somewhat stable and predictable over time. Personality disorder = a pattern of perceiving, reacting, and relating to other people and events that is relatively inflexible and that impairs a person’s ability to function socially; personality traits become rigid and dysfunctional; personality disorders are chronic and maladaptive, impacting all aspects of one’s life.
Personality disorders are grouped into 3 clusters according to the DSM-V • Cluster A: Behaviors are described as odd or eccentric • Cluster B: Behaviors are described as dramatic, emotional, or erratic • Cluster C: Behaviors are described as anxious or fearful
Cluster A Disorders • Paranoid personality disorder • Schizoid personality disorder • Schizotypal personality disorder Cluster B Disorders • Antisocial personality disorder • Borderline personality disorder • Histrionic personality disorder • Narcissistic personality disorder Cluster C Disorders • Avoidant personality disorder • Dependent personality disorder • Obsessive-compulsive personality disorder
Characteristics of Cluster A Disorders • Paranoid personality disorder • distrust and suspiciousness • interprets others’ actions as hostile • Schizoid personality disorder • detachment from social relationships • restricted range of emotional expression • Schizotypal personality disorder • acute discomfort with close relationships • cognitive and perceptual distortions • close relationships difficult due to behavioral eccentricities
Characteristics of Cluster B Disorders • Antisocial personality disorder • disregard for and violation of the rights of others • lacks remorse • Borderline personality disorder • instability in interpersonal relationships, self-image, and affect/mood • extreme impulsitivity • tries to avoid real or imagined abandonment at any cost • recurring suicidal behavior, gestures, threats
Cluster B Characteristics (cont’d) • Histrionic personality disorder • exaggerated and rapidly shifting expression of emotion • attention-seeking behaviors • sexual provocation or seductiveness in an effort to be the center of attention • Narcissistic personality disorder • grandiosity; exaggerated sense of self-importance • need for admiration • lack of empathy
Characteristics of Cluster C Disorders • Avoidant personality disorder • social inhibition • feelings of inadequacy • hypersensitive to negative evaluation • preoccupied with being rejected in social situations • reluctance to take personal risks
Cluster C Characteristics (cont’d) • Dependent personality disorder • submissive and clinging behavior • excessive need to be taken care of • needs others to assume responsibility for most major areas in life • difficulty initiating actions due to lack of confidence in own judgment and abilities • urgent seeking of relationship as source of care and support
Cluster C Characteristics (cont’d) • Obsessive-Compulsive personality disorder • preoccupation with orderliness and control • perfectionism • listing, ordering, or scheduling to the point of redundance • rigid and stubborn
Objective 2 Examining therapies appropriate for clients with a personality disorder
Interpersonal psychotherapy • cornerstone of effective treatment • therapy modalities are long-term • Psychoanalytical psychotherapy • Milieu or group therapy • Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) • Psychopharmacology • Anxiolytics • Antidepressants
Objective 3 Reviewing the use, classifications, side effects, and nursing care related to medications for personality disorders
Anxiolytics and antidepressants are used to treat the primary disruptive symptoms of personality disorders: anxiety and depression • Anxiolytics include antihistamines, benzodiazepines, and miscellaneous agents like buspirone (Buspar) • Buspar does not depress the CNS like other anxiolytics • Efficacy takes 10 days to 2 weeks • Not useful for PRN dosing • Common side effects are drowsiness, confusion, and lethargy
Antidepressants include tricyclics, SSRIs, MAOIs, and miscellaneous agents like bupropion (Wellbutrin) and venlafaxine (Effexor) • Antidepressants in general may decrease seizure threshold • Teach patient that gradual withdrawal is crucial • May increase suicide potential • Common side effects include dry mouth, nausea, and sedation • MAOIs have many concurrent dietary and medication restrictions • Hypertensive crisis is potentially fatal
Objective 4 Applying the nursing process to a client with a personality disorder
Assessment • Gather information about client’s mood and level of anxiety, thoughts to harm self/others • Diagnosis • Risk for self-directed violence R/T suicidal feelings • Risk for violence directed toward others R/T homicidal ideation • Disturbed sleep pattern R/T depression • Planning • Care plan • Concept map
Implementation • Establish trust • Provide for safety • Perform risk assessment • Administer scheduled and PRN medications • Evaluation • Mental health/psychiatric assessment tool • Review safety plan/contract • Assess for medication side effects