1: Borderline Personality Disorder2: Generalist psychiatric treatments for borderline personality disorder3: Structured Clinical Management: General Treatment Strategies4: Structured Clinical Management: Core Treatment Strategies5: Structured Clinical Management: Team strategies6: Structured Clinical Management: In-patient Treatment and Prescribing7: Family and Friends8: Top 10 additional resource-efficient treatment strategies
Anthony W. Bateman is Consultant Psychiatrist and Psychotherapist, Halliwick Unit, Barnet, Enfield, and Haringey Mental Health Trust, Visiting Professor University College, London and Consultant to the Anna Freud Centre, London. He developed mentalization based treatment with Peter Fonagy for borderline personality disorder and studied its effectiveness in research trials. An adapted version is now being used in other psychiatric disorders and in the treatment of families and adolescents. He was an expert member of National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) development group for treatment guidelines for Borderline Personality Disorder in UK. He is President of the European Society for the Study of Personality Disorders (ESSPD). He has authored several books including 'Psychotherapy for Borderline Personality Disorder: Mentalization based treatment' and 'Mentalization Based Treatment for Borderline Personality Disorder: A practical guide' (with Peter Fonagy). Roy Krawitz is a psychiatrist and Honorary Clinical Senior Lecturer (Auckland University) specializing for the last 20 years in working with people with borderline personality disorder (BPD), and is a director and trainer of a company providing DBT training. Roy has published research demonstrating the effectiveness of his generalist borderline personality disorder trainings (125 two-day trainings), the clinical effectiveness of his past therapy, and the clinical effectiveness of the DBT service in which he works. Roy is the author of 14 scientific articles and 5 other books on BPD (including client and clinician guides published by Oxford University Press in four languages in total).
A 350-word review is not enough to do this book justice. Written by
two psychiatrists, one with a psychodynamic and the other a
behavioural orientation, the book succeeds in outlining different
psychological and pharmacological approaches to the treatment of
borderline personality disorder in a harmonius and enlightened
way.,, This book is highly recommended and I consider the authors
to have achieved what they set out to do: instill hope in all of us
working with patients with borderline personality disorder and, in
so doing, instil hope in patients themselves.
*Psychiatric Bulletin*
This book presents a fairly short but effective treatment guideline
for borderline personality disorder. It is definitely a top-down
recommendation for how to structure the treatment, what goals are
important, how to deal with crisis, etc.
*Breet C. Plyler, MD, Doody's Notes*
I have just now come across your book, and it is absolutely
excellent! There is a real need to move BPD treatment from
specialty clinics to more general care If we give people the
impression that the only treatment is DBT or MBT, we will deny them
the likelihood of doing well with something more practical that
still applies the right principles, reserving more
resource-intensive models for the sickest patients.
Congratulations!
*Dr Joel Paris, McGill University, Canada*
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