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225 Pages·2006·1.03 MB·English
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Antisocial Personality Disorder A Practitioner’s Guide to Comparative Treatments Edited by FREDERICK ROTGERS, PSYD, ABPP and MICHAEL MANIACCI, PSYD New York Copyright 2006 by Springer Publishing Company, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of Springer Publishing Company, Inc. Springer Publishing Company, Inc. 11 West 42nd Street, 15th Floor New York, NY 10036-8002 Acquisitions Editor: Sheri W. Sussman Production Editor: Print Matters Composition: Compset, Inc. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Antisocial personality disorder: a practitioner’s guide to comparative treatments / [edited by] Frederick Rotgers, Michael Maniacci. p. ; cm. — (Springer series on comparative treatments for psychological disorders) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-8261-5554-5 (hc) 1. Antisocial personality disorder—Treatment. I. Rotgers, Frederick. II. Maniacci, Michael. III. Series. [DNLM: 1. Antisocial Personality Disorder—therapy. 2. Psychotherapy—methods. WM 190 C7367 2005] RC555.C66 2005 616.85'82—dc22 2005054056 ISBN 0-8261-5554-5 06 07 08 09 10 5 4 3 2 1 Printed in the United States of America by Bang Printing Contents Contributors v 1 Antisocial Personality Disorder: An Introduction 1 Frederick Rotgers and Michael Maniacci Structure of the Book 2 Overview of APD 3 Questions for Authors 7 Treatment Approaches 9 2 The Case of Frank 11 Arthur Freeman Background Information 11 Initial Assessment 19 3 A Psychodynamic Approach 21 Debra Benveniste 4 Adlerian Psychotherapy 47 Michael Maniacci 5 Millon’s Biosocial-Learning Perspective: 63 Personologic Psychotherapy Darwin Dorr Theory of Personologic Polarities 65 6 The Lifestyle Approach to Substance Abuse and Crime 91 Glenn D. Walters The Lifestyle Model of Change 91 Essential Clinical Skills 95 Specific Questions 97 Conclusion 112 7 The Cognitive Behavioral Treatment Approach 115 Arthur Freeman & Brian Eig iii iv Contents 8 Dialectical Behavior Therapy 137 Robin A. McCann, Katherine Anne Comtois, and Elissa M. Ball 9 Motivational Interviewing 157 Joel I. Ginsburg, C.A. Farbring, and L. Forsberg 10 Integrating Psychotherapy and Medication 179 Sharon Morgillo Freeman and John M. Rathbun Diagnostic Challenges 180 Pathophysiology of aggression and impulsivity 181 Impulsivity and Aggression 183 The Case of Frank 184 Treatment challenges 185 Medication Options 186 Options for Frank 188 Optimistic Prognostic Factors 190 Summary 190 11 Antisocial Personality Disorder: 195 Summary and Conclusions Frederick Rotgers Index 209 Contributors Elissa M. Ball, MD, Institute for Forensic Psychiatry, Colorado Mental Health Institute. Pueblo, Colorado Debra Benveniste, MA, MSW, Private Practice, Putnam, Connecticut Katherine Anne Comtois, PhD, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington Darwin Dorr, PhD, Wichita State University, Wichita, Kansas Brian Eig, Department of Psychology, Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Carl Ake Farbring, MA, Swedish National Prison & Probation Administra- tion, Stockholm, Sweden Lars Forsberg, PhD, Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Section of Dependency Research, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden Arthur Freeman, EdD, Department of Psychology, University of St. Francis, Fort Wayne, Indiana Joel I. D. Ginsburg, PhD, C. Psych, Psychologist, Correctional Service of Canada, Fenbrook Institution, Gravenhurst, Ontario, Canada Robin A. McCann, PhD, Institute for Forensic Psychiatry, Colorado Mental Health Institute, Denver, Colorado Sharon Morgillo Freeman, PhD, MSN, RN-CS, Indiana University Purdue University, Aboite Behavioral Health Services, Fort Wayne, Indiana John M. Rathbun, MD, Aboite Behavioral Health Services, Fort Wayne, Indiana Glenn D. Walters, PhD, Federal Correctional Institution, Schuylkill, Pennsylvania v This page intentionally left blank C H A P T E R 1 Antisocial Personality Disorder An Introduction Frederick Rotgers and Michael Maniacci The therapy of patients with disorders of character or personality has been discussed in the clinical literature since the beginning of the recorded history of psychotherapy. Literature on the psychotherapeutic treatment of specific personality disorders has emerged more recently and is growing quickly. The main theoretical orientation in the psychotherapeutic literature on treat- ment of personality disorders has been psychoanalytic (e.g., Kernberg, 1975; Masterson, 1978; Reid, 1978). Psychoanalytic writers have produced a rich literature on treatment of these patients for more than 30 years. More recently, cognitive behavioral therapists (e.g., Beck & Freeman, 1990; Young, 1994) have offered a cognitive behavioral treatment approach. Despite the literature in this area, there have been few opportunities for a comparison and integration of extant models. Very often, writers end up “preaching to the converted” in that those therapists who are psychodynami- cally oriented tend to read the psychodynamic literature just as cognitive and behavioral therapists stick to their own literature. Cross fertilization of ap- proaches is thereby stymied. Probably no single diagnostic group engenders as much concern, con- sternation, and fear among therapists as does Antisocial Personality Disorder (APD). This concern and attention stems from the fact that these patients usu- ally require more time in treatment (when they come), more energy on the 1 2 ANTISOCIAL PERSONALITY DISORDER part of the therapist (where the patient may offer very little to the therapeutic collaboration), and more time and attention from the care system (because of the chronicity of personality disorders), all without the same progress and gratification seen with many other patients. In fact, many therapists simply throw up their hands and claim that these individuals cannot be treated in psychotherapy. The patient diagnosed as having APD often ends up “clogging up” the legal and mental health systems, continually relapsing and given to extensive utilization of mental health treatment services with little positive change. Given all of the difficulties in treating these patients, they still must be treated. The best model for treatment is debatable. Theorists often advocate the application of their etiologic, conceptual, philosophical, and treatment model, to the exclusion of other approaches. What has not, to this point, been explicated are the similarities and differences between various etiologic, conceptual, philosophical, and treatment models. In this volume we attempt, in small measure, to provide a forum in which experts in prominent models of treatment for patients with APD all answer the same set of questions with respect to their treatment model, ad- dressing both conceptual and technical aspects of the model. Authors were provided with a prototypical case study of a patient with APD to serve as the springboard for their answers. Before we turn to the questions and a brief overview of APD, we need to state that this book is not intended to be a comprehensive survey of the treatment of APD. Rather, we have selected a number of prominent models of treatment that we believe span the psychodynamic, eclectic, and behavioral approaches to treating these patients. There are certainly other models avail- able, and we do not intend to imply that these models are the only ones, nor that they are the most efficacious. We leave the latter judgment to outcome researchers, who are only recently beginning to examine outcomes specifi- cally with APD. STRUCTURE OF THE BOOK In the remainder of this chapter we will present a brief overview of the con- struct of APD, with a focus on diagnostic considerations and several ongoing controversies regarding the construct of APD. We will not review the extant treatment outcome literature, for the primary reason that there is virtually no well-designed outcome research that focuses solely on APD outcomes. In fact, virtually all of the experimental treatment outcome research with these Antisocial Personality Disorder: An Introduction 3 patients has occurred in the context of treatment of substance use disorders, a very common co-occurring set of disorders in patients with APD. Following this overview, we will detail the questions our authors were asked to address with respect to the treatment of Frank J., whose case is presented in detail in chapter 2. The responses of our chapter authors fol- low. We will conclude in our final chapter with a summary and synthesis of the responses our authors provided. It is our hope that this discussion will stimulate not only development and enhancement of treatment for patients with APD, but that it will also provide impetus for outcome research on the treatments outlined. OVERVIEW OF APD In this section we will briefly review the history and construction of the con- cept of APD and the current criteria for its diagnosis, and we will describe some of the clinical features of the disorder that are most relevant for treat- ment. In addition, we will address two continuing controversies in the field regarding APD: the relationship of morality and criminality to APD, and the question of whether APD represents a qualitative or quantitative departure from normal personality functioning. Finally, we will examine the somewhat sparse outcome literature for the treatment of APD. Of necessity, this chapter will be less than comprehensive. For a more detailed discussion of these issues we would refer the reader to the excellent chapter on “Antisocial Personality Disorders: The Aggrandizing Pattern” in Millon and Davis’s book Disorders of Personality: DSM-IV and Beyond (1996, pp. 429–469). Although written from a particular theoretical perspective, this chapter presents a detailed overview of the concept of APD and reviews in more detail the controversies we will only touch upon here. The concept of APD is quite old, dating, in a surprisingly modern form, to Aristotle (Millon & Davis, 1996), whose description of the “unscrupulous man” is perhaps the earliest of this personality pattern. As the concept of APD evolved into the 18th and 19th centuries, it became increasingly linked with criminality and immoral behavior. This linkage persists today, and for some theorists (e.g. Millon & Davis) it represents a major problem in the current diagnostic system for APD. Specifically, the association of APD with criminal and immoral behavior needlessly limits the concept to those with criminal involvement or those whose behavior is considered immoral. Many theorists believe that this limitation results in the omission of many people whose per- sonality functioning is clearly the same as that in persons who end up in the criminal justice system, but who never become so involved. It is believed

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