articleAmerican Journal of PsychiatryMar 17, 2008Closed access

8-Year Follow-Up of Patients Treated for Borderline Personality Disorder: Mentalization-Based Treatment Versus Treatment as Usual

Dorset HealthCare University NHS Foundation Trust

PubMed
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Abstract

Objective

This study evaluated the effect of mentalization-based treatment by partial hospitalization compared to treatment as usual for borderline personality disorder 8 years after entry into a randomized, controlled trial and 5 years after all mentalization-based treatment was complete. METHOD: Interviewing was by research psychologists blind to original group allocation and structured review of medical notes of 41 patients from the original trial. Multivariate analysis of variance, chi-square, univariate analysis of variance, and nonparametric Mann-Whitney statistics were used to contrast the two groups depending on the distribution of the data.

Results

Five years after discharge from mentalization-based treatment, the mentalization-based treatment by partial hospitalization group continued to show clinical and statistical superiority to treatment as usual on suicidality (23% versus 74%), diagnostic status (13% versus 87%), service use (2 years versus 3.5 years of psychiatric outpatient treatment), use of medication (0.02 versus 1.90 years taking three or more medications), global function above 60 (45% versus 10%), and vocational status (employed or in education 3.2 years versus 1.2 years).

Citation impact

886
total citations
FWCI
67.23
Percentile
100%
References
28
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Mentalization
  • Borderline personality disorder
  • Psychology
  • Randomized controlled trial
  • Partial hospitalization
  • Psychiatry
  • Clinical psychology
  • Multivariate analysis of variance
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