Treatment of personality disorder in a prison therapeutic community

For many years it has been asserted that those with personality disorder were "untreatable" however in more recent times this has been challenged and the therapeutic community has come to be seen as the most effective model of treatment. This thesis investigates the impact of treatment in...

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Main Author: Northey, Sara K.
Published: University of Surrey 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.576081
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5760812015-03-20T04:09:57ZTreatment of personality disorder in a prison therapeutic communityNorthey, Sara K.2012For many years it has been asserted that those with personality disorder were "untreatable" however in more recent times this has been challenged and the therapeutic community has come to be seen as the most effective model of treatment. This thesis investigates the impact of treatment in a prison therapeutic community on personality disordered offenders. The participating samples were therapeutic community residents (N=58) and a comparison group from mainstream prison (N=14). The research used a longitudinal design and both groups of participants were followed-up after twelve months . .. /~,.., .. The thesis presents an historical overview of personality disorder, including definitions and theoretical explanations before elucidating the links between personality disorder and criminality. A description of prison interventions and interventions specifically for personality disorder is provided. The specific aims of the research were to examine the efficacy of treating personality disordered male offenders within a prison therapeutic community. The prevalence of personality disorder within this setting was also investigated and two methods of diagnosing personality disorder were compared (self-report and clinical interview). The results of the current research show that the therapeutic community is effective in improving the symptoms of paranoid personality disorder, in particular, and provides some encouraging support for the treatability of personality disordered offenders. However, antisocial personality disorder may well get worse during time in the therapeutic community and more work is to be done to develop an effective treatment for this type of offender. In the concluding chapter of the thesis, the results are discussed in terms of links to existing literature and their contribution to theory. Implications for practice are proposed, the limitations of the research are discussed along with areas for future research.616.858106University of Surreyhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.576081Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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topic 616.858106
spellingShingle 616.858106
Northey, Sara K.
Treatment of personality disorder in a prison therapeutic community
description For many years it has been asserted that those with personality disorder were "untreatable" however in more recent times this has been challenged and the therapeutic community has come to be seen as the most effective model of treatment. This thesis investigates the impact of treatment in a prison therapeutic community on personality disordered offenders. The participating samples were therapeutic community residents (N=58) and a comparison group from mainstream prison (N=14). The research used a longitudinal design and both groups of participants were followed-up after twelve months . .. /~,.., .. The thesis presents an historical overview of personality disorder, including definitions and theoretical explanations before elucidating the links between personality disorder and criminality. A description of prison interventions and interventions specifically for personality disorder is provided. The specific aims of the research were to examine the efficacy of treating personality disordered male offenders within a prison therapeutic community. The prevalence of personality disorder within this setting was also investigated and two methods of diagnosing personality disorder were compared (self-report and clinical interview). The results of the current research show that the therapeutic community is effective in improving the symptoms of paranoid personality disorder, in particular, and provides some encouraging support for the treatability of personality disordered offenders. However, antisocial personality disorder may well get worse during time in the therapeutic community and more work is to be done to develop an effective treatment for this type of offender. In the concluding chapter of the thesis, the results are discussed in terms of links to existing literature and their contribution to theory. Implications for practice are proposed, the limitations of the research are discussed along with areas for future research.
author Northey, Sara K.
author_facet Northey, Sara K.
author_sort Northey, Sara K.
title Treatment of personality disorder in a prison therapeutic community
title_short Treatment of personality disorder in a prison therapeutic community
title_full Treatment of personality disorder in a prison therapeutic community
title_fullStr Treatment of personality disorder in a prison therapeutic community
title_full_unstemmed Treatment of personality disorder in a prison therapeutic community
title_sort treatment of personality disorder in a prison therapeutic community
publisher University of Surrey
publishDate 2012
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.576081
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