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Adolescent Suicide Attempts and Borderline Personality Disorder
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1981
Year
PsychotherapyBorderline PersonalityEducationMental HealthPsychologyPersonality DisorderBorderline PatientsAdolescent Suicide AttemptsMood SymptomPersistent InstabilityPersonality DisordersTeen Mental HealthPsychiatryDepressionAdolescent PsychologyAdolescent DevelopmentPsychiatric DisorderSuicideMedicinePsychopathology
Although suicide among adolescents has been increasing over the past decade, there are surprisingly few clinical studies regarding teen-agers who have attempted suicide. A previous study showed borderline personality disorder as the most common underlying personality problem among a group of predominantly hospitalized adolescents. This paper focuses on the clinical characteristics of 22 teen-agers with a borderline personality disorder who had attempted suicide. The essential pattern of a borderline personality was a persistent instability in a variety of areas, including interpersonal relations, mood, behavior, and self-image. The most prominent characteristics associated with suicide attempts by these adolescents were a tendency to react severely to loss, poorly controlled anger, and self-defeating impulsivity. Many of the characteristic behavioral symptoms of these borderline patients must be determined by a longitudinal history of the teen-ager's life. Specific treatment approaches are needed for these patients.