Perspectives of service users and carers with lived experience of a diagnosis of personality disorder: A qualitative study
Anna Balmer, Laura Sambrook, Hana Roks, Peter Ashley‐Mudie, Jackie Tait, Christopher Bu, Jason C. McIntyre, Amrith Shetty, Rajan Nathan, Pooja Saini- Pshychiatric Mental Health
Accessible Summary
What the paper adds to existing knowledge?
Personality disorder is a serious mental health condition affecting up to 52% of psychiatric outpatients and 70% of inpatients and forensic patients. People with a diagnosis of personality disorder have higher morbidity and mortality than those without. Service users and carers reported a lack of training for staff in the management of individuals with a diagnosis of personality disorder, particularly with regard to self‐harm and suicidal behaviours. Staff burnout creates barriers to compassionate person‐centred care for individuals with a diagnosis of personality disorder as staff struggled to accommodate the nature of the presentation when under significant emotional, psychological and professional strain caused by understaffing and lack of support.
What are the implications for practice?
This paper adds new knowledge by informing services of ways to improve care provision from the perspectives of both carers and service users. A more holistic and less medicalised approach to the treatment of problems associated with a diagnosis of a personality disorder should be adopted, and personality disorder training introduced for all healthcare practitioners, to improve patient outcomes.