BackgroundNegative attitudes towards patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD) may affect their treatment. We aimed to identify attitudes toward patients with BPD.MethodsClinicians in four psychiatric hospitals in Israel (n = 710; psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers and nurses) were approached and completed questionnaires on attitudes toward these patients.ResultsNurses and psychiatrists reported encountering a higher number of patients with BPD during the last month, and exhibited more negative attitudes and less empathy toward these patients than the other two professions. The whole sample evaluated the decision to hospitalize such a patient as less justified than the decision to hospitalize a patient with Major Depressive Disorder. Negative attitudes were positively correlated with caring for greater numbers of patients with BPD in the past month and in the past 12 months. Nurses expressed the highest interest in studying short-term methods for treating patients with BPD and a lower percentage of psychiatrists expressed an interest in improving their professional skills in treating these patients.ConclusionsThe findings show that nurses and psychiatrists differ from the other professions in their experience and attitudes toward patients with BPD. We conclude that nurses and psychiatrists may be the target of future studies on their attitudes toward provocative behavioral patterns (e.g., suicide attempts) characterizing these patients. We also recommend implementing workshops for improving staff attitudes toward patients with BPD.
The aim of the study was to examine the oral health and treatment needs of chronically hospitalized psychiatric patients in Israel. Ten percent of the patients hospitalized for more than 2 years in the 18 psychiatric institutions in Israel were selected at random. The dental status (DMF-T index) was calculated, demographic and medical data were retrieved from the files. Of the 431 patients examined (250 men, 181 women, average age 54 years) 312 patients had only partial natural dentition. The average DMF-T score was 26.74 (out of 32), one of the highest in the literature. The caries component accounted for 2.3% of the DMF-T, the missing teeth component 72% and the restored teeth component 5%. There was an adverse correlation between age and caries and between duration of hospitalization and number of teeth. The average number of carious and missing teeth was higher than in the healthy population. No all-edentulous patients had dentures. These findings confirm the urgent need for an intervention program to improve dental health care in high-risk, difficult-to-treat, psychiatric chronic inpatients.
Although aggressive, violent, and dangerous behavior in man has multifactorial causes, genetic factors are estimated by twin and adoption studies to substantially contribute to the development of such conduct. Recently, homozygosity of a low enzyme activity variant of the catechol O-methyltransferase (COMT) gene was reported to be associated with aggressive behavior in a group of schizophrenic patients. We observe a similar tendency in a group of 30 schizophrenic patients who were confined to a maximum-security psychiatric facility for homicide. Significant excess (46.7% versus 21.0%) homozygosity of the low activity COMTmet/met genotype was observed in 30 mostly male (28 of 30) homicidal schizophrenic patients compared with 415 control subjects (Pearson chi(2) = 10.53, P = 0.005, df = 2). No difference in COMT genotype was found between 62 nonviolent schizophrenic patients and the 415 control subjects (chi(2) = 0.963, P > 0.1, df = 2). A trend for excess (46.7% versus 25.8%) homozygosity of the low activity COMTmet/met genotype was also observed when the homicidal schizophrenic subjects were compared directly with the nonviolent schizophrenic patients (chi(2) = 4.03, P = 0.1, df = 2). Similarly, an excess of the low activity COMTmet allele was observed in homicidal versus nonviolent schizophrenic patients (chi(2) = 2.92, P = 0.087, df = 2). Similar results were obtained if only male subjects were examined. No significant difference was found between control (257 Ashkenazi and 152 non-Ashkenazi Jews) COMT genotypes in the two principal ethnic groups examined (chi(2) = 3.79, P > 0.1, df = 2). Finally, no association was observed between homicidal behavior in schizophrenic patients and the dopamine D4 exon III repeat length polymorphism (D4DR) and the serotonin transporter promoter-region polymorphism (5-HTTLPR). Am. J. Med. Genet. (Neuropsychiatr. Genet.) 88:628-633, 1999.
The findings support the hypothesis of a predisposing role of the preoccupied and fearful-avoidant styles in psychotic symptom formation and call for cognitive interpersonal interventions geared to reduce symptom and emotional distress severity.
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