Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
This study is intended to determine whether the additional presence of personality disorder predicts poor hospital and posthospital recovery in psychiatric inpatients with Axis I disorders. Seventy-eight patients who were subsequently hospitalized had reliable DSM-III-R Axis I and personality disorder (PD) assessments. At hospital admission, at discharge, and at 1- and 2-year follow-up, measures of clinical functioning (BPRS, MADS, Health Sickness Scale), ratings of treatment completion, and working alliance were obtained. Thirty-five percent of patients met criteria for personality disorder. Personality disorder significantly predicted (at either the .01 or the .05 level) greater comorbidity at admission; poorer working alliance and treatment completion at discharge; poorer global outcome, symptomatic severity, autonomy, and social investments at 1-year follow-up; and poorer interpersonal relationships at 2 years. At 2 years, PD patients had obtained more therapy but these were less specific treatments. DSM-III-R personality disorder diagnosis is suggested to be a valuable predictor of slow recovery, poor treatment compliance, and long-term psychosocial risk in psychiatric inpatients. Treatment resistance in PD patients should be a major target of clinical intervention, research, and institutional policies.
Andréoli et al. (Fri,) studied this question.