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Adaptive Solutions to Personality Disorders: Treating Patients with Nidotherapy [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 234 pages, height x width: 229x152 mm, weight: 453 g, 11 Tables, black and white; 2 Line drawings, black and white; 2 Illustrations, black and white
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Sep-2025
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032909439
  • ISBN-13: 9781032909431
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
  • Formāts: Hardback, 234 pages, height x width: 229x152 mm, weight: 453 g, 11 Tables, black and white; 2 Line drawings, black and white; 2 Illustrations, black and white
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Sep-2025
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032909439
  • ISBN-13: 9781032909431
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:

This book explores nidotherapy: the systematic process of changing the physical, social, and personal environment for clients who have failed to respond fully to conventional treatments.

Peter Tyrer argues that clients with personality disorders can improve enormously when placed in the right environment, and introduces the process of nidotherapy. The chapters explore methods of matching the patient to the environment, modification of the environment, and patient adaptation, along with case examples and a glossary of key terms. Additionally, the use of ICD-11 classification to understand all aspects of a person’s personality is explored to assess personality difficulty, social prescribing, and treatments for severe personality disorder.

This book is essential for psychiatrists, clinical psychologists and mental health professionals who treat personality disorders, as well as graduate students in clinical psychology courses.



This book explores nidotherapy: the systematic process of changing the physical, social, and personal environment for clients who have failed to respond fully to conventional treatments.

Recenzijas

"This passionate and beautifully written book from a leader in community psychiatry makes the case for providing better care for a sadly neglected population. Patients with personality disorders may recover, but those who do not tend to fall within the cracks of the mental health system. Their access to care may be limited by having a difficult personality. Yet, as Tyrer shows, there are evidence-based ways to manage that obstacle. The concept behind nidotherapy is to intervene in ways that better match patients environment to their personality profile. This concept is well illustrated here by a number of telling case histories. This book will be of great value for mental health clinicians who treat these often-forgotten patients."

Joel Paris, emeritus professor of Psychiatry, McGill University. Author of Social Factors in the Personality Disorders: Finding a Niche.

"In this well written and accessible book, Peter Tyrer captures what might be the essence of personality and its disorders. Synthesising a great breadth of research and his own vast experience combined with research and practice in this field, Tyrer asserts that personality is something we all have, and that, to varying degrees, we are all disordered; but the environment in which we find ourselves will in large part determine the extent to which our disordered personality will cause us harm or, indeed, work in our favour. As Donald Trump has just entered the White House for the second time, and using some illustrative case histories, this sensitively written book makes sense of how environments are so important to anyone with a disordered personality. Rather than turning to therapies such as mentalisation or dialectical behaviour therapies, Tyrer argues, we need to adjust environments for our numerous patients who are largely ignored by the rest of health and mental health to theirs and our detriments. This is a genuinely radical approach which has enormous implications for patients, for psychiatrists for policy makers and for the future of mental health. Read it!"

Tim Kendall, professor, CBE FRCPsych

"This is a very important book. It opens up a unique perspective on the approach to helping people who have a diagnosis of personality disorder, a concept within itself is open to challenge. Peter Tyrer has been at the forefront on innovative practice in the care and treatment of people with psychological challenges for over 50 years and this book is a must read for all members of the multi-disciplinary team. The link with environment and psychological wellbeing is so often overlooked. Far too often a biological approach is taken to the care and treatment for people with severe and enduring mental illness and in the case of people who are diagnosed with personality disorder they are far too often written off as untreatable. This book invites the reader to reappraise their thinking in relation to the environment and psychological difficulties and to realise the benefits of Peter Tyrers approach that, if adopted, will do much to improve the outcomes and offer solutions to some of the challenges that mental health services face."

Dr Peter Carter, former Chief Executive, Royal College of Nursing

1. Defining current thinking in personality disorders and nidotherapy
2.
Why ICD-11 helps to facilitate treatment of personality disorder
3. Domains
of personality
4. The borderline conundrum
5. Understanding personality
involves being honest with yourself
6. General Principles of Adaptation
7.
Why nidotherapy can help adaptation
8. Adapting to personality difficulty
9.Adapting to negative affectivity
10. Adapting to the detachment domain
11.
Adapting to the dissociality
12. Adapting to the disinhibited domain
13.
Adapting to the anankastic domain
14. Adaptation in practice
15. Adapting
nidotherapy to mental health services
16. Adaptive approaches for Galenic
syndromes
17. Adapting to unstable environments
18. The treatment of severe
personality disorder
19. Personality disorder and stigma
Peter Tyrer is an emeritus professor of community psychiatry in the Division of Psychiatry in the Department of Brain Sciences, Imperial College, London. His extensive body of work includes over 600 original articles and books, primarily focused on subjects such as anxiety, depression, personality disorders, and their respective treatments. In 1990, he developed nidotherapy, an approach involving collaborative and systematic assessment and manipulation of the environment to assist individuals with chronic mental illnesses.