Personality development disorder

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A personality development disorder is an inflexible and pervasive pattern of inner experience and behavior in children and adolescents, that markedly deviates from the expectations of the individual's culture.

Contents

Personality development disorder is not recognized as a mental disorder in any of the medical manuals, such as the ICD-10 [1] or the DSM-IV, [2] nor the more recent DSM-5. [3] DSM-IV allows the diagnosis of personality disorders in children and adolescents only as an exception. This diagnosis is currently proposed by a few authors in Germany. [4] The term personality development disorder is used to emphasize the changes in personality development which might still take place and the open outcome during development. Personality development disorder is considered to be a childhood risk factor or early stage of a later personality disorder in adulthood.[ citation needed ]

Adults usually show personality patterns over a long duration of time. Children and adolescents however still show marked changes in personality development. Some of these children and adolescents have a hard time developing their personalities in an ordinary way. DSM-IV states, for example, that children and adolescents are at higher risk to develop an antisocial personality disorder if they showed signs of conduct disorder and attention deficit disorder before the age of 10. This led Adam & Breithaupt-Peters (2010) to the idea that these children and adolescents need to be looked at more carefully. The therapy which these children and adolescents need might be more intense and maybe even different from looking at the disorders traditionally. The concept of personality development disorders also focuses on the severity of the disorder and the poor prognosis. An early diagnosis might help to get the right treatment at an early stage and thus might help to prevent a personality disorder outcome in adulthood.

Description

Similar to the adult diagnosis personality disorder these children display enduring patterns of inner experience and behavior deviating markedly from the expectations of the individual's culture. These patterns are inflexible and pervasive across a broad range of personal and social situations, lead to clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational or other important areas of functioning and they are stable and of long duration (more than a year).

The term personality development disorder (Persönlichkeitsentwicklungsstörung) was first used in German by Spiel & Spiel (1987). Adam & Breithaupt-Peters (2010) adapted the term to a more modern concept and suggested the following definition.

Cause

Similar to adult personality disorders there are multiple causes and causal interactions for personality development disorders. In clinical practice it is important to view the disorder multi-perspectively and from an individual perspective. Biological and neurological causes need to be observed just as much as psychosocial factors. Looking at the disorder from only one perspective (e.g. (s)he had a bad childhood) often results in ignorance of important other factors or causal interactions. This might be one of the main reasons why traditional treatment methods often fail with these disorders. Only a multi-perspective view can provide for a multi-dimensional treatment approach which seems to be the key for these disorders.

Possible Causes of Personality Development Disorder

personality disorders.)


Possible Risk Factors for Personality Development Disorder

Personality development and personality disorders causes are unknown till present day but certain factors (such as family history, abusive history, family chaotic relationships during childhood or present, differences in brain chemistry and construction) can trigger the development of personality traits.'

Diagnosis

The diagnosis personality development disorder should only be given carefully and after a longer period of evaluation. A thorough diagnostic evaluation is also necessary. Parents should be questioned separately and together with the child or adolescent to evaluate the severity and duration of the problems. In addition, standardized personality tests might be helpful. It is also useful to ask the family what treatment approaches they have already tried so far without success.

Symptoms: types of personality disorders are grouped differently depending on the thinking and personality perception. There are 3 different personality clusters: Cluster A, Cluster B and Cluster C.


Diagnosis: If your medical provider believes you might have a personality development disorder, he or she might provide a physical and/or recommend a psychiatric evaluation. (Diagnostic criteria from DSM[ which? ])

Definition

According to Adam and Breithaupt-Peters[ citation needed ] personality development disorders are defined as complex disorders

Treatment

Personality development disorders usually need a complex and multi-dimensional treatment approach (Adam & Breithaupt-Peters, 2010). Since the problems are complex, treatment needs to affect the conditions in all impaired functional and social areas. Both educational and therapeutic methods are helpful and problem and strength based approaches work hand in hand. Parents need to be included as well as the school environment. Treatment methods need to be flexible and adjustable to the individual situation. Even elements of social work can be helpful when supporting the families and in some cases medication might be necessary. When suicidal behaviors or self-injuries are prominent treatment might best be done in a hospital.

For some personality development disorders (e.g. borderline personality disorder) treatment methods from adults can be adapted (e.g. dialectical behavior therapy, Miller et al., 2006)[ full citation needed ].

See also

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References

  1. "ICD 10 Codes for Psychiatry". Archived from the original on 2010-10-09.
  2. "Apa Diagnostic Classification Dsm-Iv-Tr". Archived from the original on 2011-10-26.
  3. "Disorders Usually First Diagnosed in Infancy, Childhood, or Adolescence | APA DSM-5". Archived from the original on 2010-12-04. Retrieved 2017-03-22.

Literature