Ninety-four staff from a regionally based mental health service and associated health and human services completed a two-day workshop introducing dialectical behaviour therapy, with a smaller number also undertaking advanced training. Survey and focus group data were collected on participants' demographics, attitudes, knowledge and experience of working with persons with this disorder, prior to and at one-month and six-months following completion of the introductory workshops. Quantitative and qualitative findings indicated that involvement in the training program was a positive experience for the majority of participants, with knowledge regarding detection and treatment and staff attitudes toward consumers being improved following exposure to the principles and practice of dialectical behaviour therapy. Discourse analysis of the focus group interview data pre- and post-training indicated a significant shift in the meanings staff associate with borderline personality disorder, with a pervasive therapeutic pessimism being displaced by more optimistic understandings and outlooks. Improved therapeutic outlook is likely to have positive implications for staff engagement with service users with borderline personality disorder. While this article provides a brief overview of the findings of the survey, the main purpose is to report the findings of the focus group interviews.
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