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Ethnogeographic Terrorists: Religious and Political
Published in Raymond H. Hamden, Psychology of Terrorists, 2018
Clinical experience with such persons and individual members of groups has suggested passive-aggressive characteristics. The symptoms of passive-aggressive personality disorder all revolve around the central theme that the person with such a disorder is sabotaging efforts directed at getting him or her to work or socialize at an expected level. Usually, such people think they are doing better work than they really are and get very angry when others make useful suggestions about how their performance might be improved. They tend to be critical of those in authority.
Evaluating Stable and Situational Expressions of Passive-Aggressive Personality Disorder: A Multimethod Experience Sampling Case Study
Published in Journal of Personality Assessment, 2021
Katie C. Lewis, Jeremy M. Ridenour, Seth Pitman, Michael Roche
Dale was admitted to an intensive psychodynamically-oriented residential treatment center after two decades of outpatient treatment in the context of increased suicidality. Upon admission, Dale received a primary DSM-5 (APA, 2013) diagnosis of other specified personality disorder with borderline and narcissistic traits as well as secondary diagnoses of major depressive disorder and social anxiety disorder. A review of diagnostic criteria for passive-aggressive personality disorder by his therapist, Dr. A, suggested that a formal diagnosis would also apply, as Dale met six of the seven criteria for PA personality disorder listed in the DSM-IV-TR (four of the seven criteria are required for a diagnosis; APA, 2000). The parent research study, an ecological momentary assessment study focusing on daily interpersonal experiences and self-destructive thoughts and behaviors, was approved by the facility’s Institutional Review Board, and Dale’s informed consent was obtained prior to his participation; this consent also included permission to access his psychological testing and medical records data. In addition, he provided informed consent to complete a repeat administration of self-report measures prior to discharge for the present case study.
Implicit and explicit self-concept of neuroticism in borderline personality disorder
Published in Nordic Journal of Psychiatry, 2019
Bibiana Dukalski, Thomas Suslow, Boris Egloff, Anette Kersting, Uta-Susan Donges
Thirty-five female patients meeting the DSM-IV criteria for BPD (according to the SCID-II [48]) were recruited from the Department of Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy at the University of Leipzig. Thirty-nine healthy women participated also in the present study. The Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV (SCID-I [49]) was used to diagnose Axis I mental disorders. The SCID-I [49] is a semi-structured interview for making the major Axis I DSM-IV diagnoses. It is administered by a clinician or mental health professional and includes an introductory overview followed by nine modules (A: Mood episodes, B: Psychotic and associated symptoms, C: Psychotic disorders, D: Mood disorders, E: Substance use disorders, F: Anxiety disorders, G: Somatoform disorders, H: Eating disorders and I: Adjustment disorder). The SCID-II [48] is a clinician-administered semi-structured interview for diagnosing the Axis II personality disorders of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. The SCID-II covers eleven DSM-IV personality disorders (e.g. borderline personality disorder) and the appendix categories Depressive personality disorder and Passive-aggressive personality disorder. In our study, SCIDs were administered by the first author (BD, a clinical psychologist with five years of experience in the relevant field). She was trained in the administration of the SCIDs and later supervised by two experts of our research group: a dual medical specialist (USD), consultant psychiatrist and specialist in psychosomatic medicine and psychotherapy, and a senior clinical psychologist (TS). Difficult and ambiguous cases of patients were discussed with the supervisors.
Drug-related problems among polysubstance and monosubstance users: a cross-sectional study
Published in Journal of Substance Use, 2020
The Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis II Personality Disorders (SCID-II) determines whether criteria are met for the DSM-IV Axis II personality disorders, as well as depressive personality disorder and passive-aggressive personality disorder. The Arabic version used in this study was translated and validated in a previous Egyptian study (Hatata et al., personal communication).