Enduring Effects of One-Day Training in Good Psychiatric Management on Clinician Attitudes About Borderline Personality Disorder.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
11-1-2018
Journal Title
The Journal of nervous and mental disease
MeSH Headings
Attitude of Health Personnel, Borderline Personality Disorder, Education, Medical, Continuing, Female, Health Personnel, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Psychiatry
Abstract
Time-limited interventions may attenuate stigma and negative beliefs about borderline personality disorder (BPD) among mental health clinicians. This study examined whether a 1-day training in good psychiatric management (GPM) changed clinician attitudes and beliefs and whether those changes persisted over time. Fifty-two mental health clinicians attended a 1-day GPM training and completed a 13-item assessment of attitudes about BPD before and after the training and again 6 months later. One-way repeated-measures analysis of variances and dependent sample t-tests demonstrated significant changes for all items, 11 of which were in the direction of more positive attitudes about BPD. For six items, attitudes did not change immediately after training, but 6 months later had changed significantly. Findings indicate that brief training can foster enduring improvements in clinician attitudes and beliefs about BPD.
ISSN
1539-736X
First Page
865
Last Page
869
Recommended Citation
Masland, Sara Rose; Price, Daniel; MacDonald, Jacob; Finch, Ellen; Gunderson, John; and Choi-Kain, Lois, "Enduring Effects of One-Day Training in Good Psychiatric Management on Clinician Attitudes About Borderline Personality Disorder." (2018). MaineHealth Maine Medical Center. 1434.
https://knowledgeconnection.mainehealth.org/mmc/1434