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  Healthcare Training Institute - Quality Education since 1979 CE for Psychologist, Social Worker, Counselor, & MFT!! 
  
Section 11 Question 
11 | Test 
| Table of Contents 
 Figure 4 shows that, in addition to their surprisingly low frequency, derealization experiences actually discriminate the schizophrenics, who experience them more frequently (p .023). No significant differences are apparent for depersonalization. Nor does any difference appear for psychotic depressive symptoms. The borderline sample has more brief paranoid experiences than the neurotic group (p = .014) but not than the schizophrenics. The latter group, however, is much more likely to have widespread delusional beliefs in other areas (Ji <.001), which makes clinical discrimination quite easy. Although borderlines are slightly more likely to report psychotic experiences from marijuana or alcohol or persisting psychotic symptoms after psychotomimetics, this occurs too infrequently in these samples for any significant differences to surface. As expected, the schizophrenic sample presents significantly more of those psychotic symptoms specifically felt to be unlikely in borderlines, i.e., hallucinations, nihilistic and grandiose delusions, and patently absurd or bizarre delusional content (~ <.001). In hearing about past psychiatric contacts, the interviewers judged that the borderlines develop transient psychotic experiences within psychotherapy or have had a behavioral regression after hospitalization with much more frequency than either the schizophrenics (p = .003) or the neurotic depressives (p = .004). The section total score is significantly higher for the borderlines than for the neurotics (p = .012) but not than for the schizophrenics. INTERPERSONAL RELATIONS Their most intense current relationships are frequently troubled by breakups. Their relationships are strongly dependent, masochistic, and marked by devaluation and conscious manipulative efforts. The interviewers could frequently see similarities between these interactional patterns and those described in the patient's relation to one of his parents -usually the mother. The current interactions seem to serve a substitutive function. During the research interviews, the borderlines are often quite suspicious and problems in rapport are common. Their past psychiatric hospitalizations often include a history of presenting special problems for the staff. The 
summary statements all discriminate between one or both groups in this section 
(see Figure 5). The borderlines differ from schizophrenics both in their disinclination 
to and their difficulty in being alone (p = .0 1). The schizophrenics are more 
often judged to be socially isolated "loners" (p <.001). The borderlines 
seek anaclitic relations in which they act as care givers, yet they are in active 
conflict about giving and receiving care. These patterns are less common for both 
the scbizophrenics (p = .006) and the neurotics (p = .029). The quality of borderlines' 
close relationships are more intense and unstable than for either the schizophrenic 
(p = .001) or neurotic sample (p = .02). Problems with devaluation, manipulation, 
and hostility are so characteristic and discriminatory that they contrast with 
both comparison groups (p <.001). Problems with dependency and masochism are 
also highly characteristic but only differ significantly from the schizophrenic 
sample (p .006). After reviewing past relations with therapy persons, the interviewers 
concluded that the borderline patients have almost always been involved in some 
problem with staff splitting, countertransference problems, or "special" 
relations to their past therapist (p <.001 with the schizophrenics, p = .005 
with the neurotic depressives). This section is highly discriminatory over-all 
between borderlines and both schizophrenics (p <.001) and neurotics (p= .005). Update - Kaurin, A., Dombrovski, A. Y., Hallquist, M. N., & Wright, A. G. C. (2022). Momentary interpersonal processes of suicidal surges in borderline personality disorder. Psychological medicine, 52(13), 2702–2712. Personal 
  Reflection Exercise #5 Haliczer, L. A., Woods, S. E., & Dixon-Gordon, K. L. (2021). Emotion regulation difficulties and interpersonal conflict in borderline personality disorder. Personality Disorders: Theory, Research, and Treatment, 12(4), 347–353. Howard, K. P., Lazarus, S. A., & Cheavens, J. S. (2021). A longitudinal examination of the reciprocal relationship between borderline personality features and interpersonal relationship quality. Personality Disorders: Theory, Research, and Treatment. QUESTION 
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