It has been suggested that children's repeated traumatisation, such as repeated exposure to physical or sexual abuse, evokes defensive operations and experiential distortions that lead to personality disorder. This understanding has major implications with regard to how staff understand their patients, their role within the relationship and the therapy approach they take. Analysis of staff's understandings regarding influences upon the therapeutic relationship with women diagnosed as borderline personality disorder, acknowledges the centrality of trauma/attachment difficulties; however, this continues to perceive relationships as internalised difficulties within the women. This research explores the negative compounding factors that result in re‐enactments of early attachments and the need for shared responsibility for producing such relationships, in order to develop a more therapeutic, supporting and validating experience for both patients and staff.
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1 September 2000
This article was originally published in
The British Journal of Forensic Practice
Review Article|
September 01 2000
Understanding the Therapeutic Relationship ‐ Women Diagnosed as Borderline Personality Disordered Available to Purchase
Tracy Wilkins;
Tracy Wilkins
Ashworth Hospital, Manchester Metropolitan University
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Samantha Warner
Samantha Warner
Ashworth Hospital, Manchester Metropolitan University
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 2042-8340
Print ISSN: 1463-6646
© MCB UP Limited
2000
The British Journal of Forensic Practice (2000) 2 (3): 30–37.
Citation
Wilkins T, Warner S (2000), "Understanding the Therapeutic Relationship ‐ Women Diagnosed as Borderline Personality Disordered". The British Journal of Forensic Practice, Vol. 2 No. 3 pp. 30–37, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/14636646200000022
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