Author:
MULDER R. T.,JOYCE P. R.,SULLIVAN P. F.,BULIK C. M.,CARTER F. A.
Abstract
Background. Current systems of describing personality pathology have significant shortcomings. A
polydiagnostic approach is used to study the relationship between psychological, psychoanalytical
and psychopathological models of personality.Methods. The subjects were 256 patients enrolled in treatment studies of major depression and
bulimia nervosa. Subjects were assessed using the Temperament and Character Inventory (TCI), the
Defense Style Questionnaire (DSQ) and the Structured Clinical Interview for DMS-III-R
personality disorders (SCID-II).Results. Subjects had high rates of DSM-III-R personality disorders with 52% having at least one
personality disorder. Cluster A personality disorders were correlated with low reward dependence,
high harm avoidance and low self-directedness and cooperativeness. Cluster B personality disorders
were related to high novelty seeking and low self-directedness and cooperativeness. Cluster C
personality disorders were correlated with high harm avoidance and low novelty seeking and low
self-directedness. Immature defences were related to DSM-III-R personality symptoms, but
individual defences were not related to personality clusters in a predictable way. Immature defences
were strongly related to low self-directedness and cooperativeness. Both TCI self-directedness scores
and immature defence scores were moderately predictive of the presence and number of personality
disorders.Conclusion. A widely accepted clinical nosology (DSM-III-R personality disorders) rated using a
clinical interview correlates reasonably predictably with two theoretical models derived from
different paradigms and rated using self-reports. This might be seen as providing concurrent validity
for all three models. However, serious methodological shortcomings confront studies of this type,
including sample selection and measurement of personality dysfunction. One way to begin to
resolve these problems is to study which personality measures are best related to treatment response
and prognosis.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
109 articles.
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