Journal ArticleDOI
542 – Stigmatization, personality disorders and adolescence
TLDR
In clinical settings, a considerable proportion of adolescents with psychopathology meet features for PD, although few of them have a confirmed clinical diagnosis, although several of them meet criteria for Cluster B PDs.About:
This article is published in European Psychiatry.The article was published on 2013-01-01. It has received 6 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Personality pathology & Personality disorders.read more
Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
The Stigma of Personality Disorders
TL;DR: Limited evidence suggests that health provider training can improve stigmatizing attitudes and that interventions combining positive messages of recovery potential with biological etiology will be most impactful to reduce stigma.
Journal ArticleDOI
Adolescents with personality disorders suffer from severe psychiatric stigma: evidence from a sample of 131 patients
TL;DR: Assessing the severity of psychiatric stigma in a sample of personality disordered adolescents to evaluate whether differences in stigma can be found in adolescents with different types and severity of personality disorders (PDs) found that Borderline PD is the strongest predictor of experiences of stigma.
Journal ArticleDOI
To tell or not to tell about your mental health problems? An intervention for students
TL;DR: In this paper, an increasing number of students in higher education have mental health problems and talking about these problems at the university is often not that easy, students fear to be stigmatised i...
Journal ArticleDOI
Accuracy of psychometric tools in the assessment of personality in adolescents and adults requesting gender-affirming treatments: A systematic review
Katrin Lehmann,Gerard Leavey +1 more
TL;DR: There are no agreed reference standards for this population and psychometric tools continue to be scored on reference data from the cisgender (not transgender) population, so individuals may be denied access to gender affirming treatments based on psychometrics without established reliability in this population.