Outcomes of therapeutic community treatment for personality disorder

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to review quantitative research since 1999 evaluating the effectiveness of democratic therapeutic community (DTC) treatment for individuals with personality disorders (PD) with reference to interpersonal and offending risk outcomes. Design/methodology/appro...

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Main Authors: Capone, Georgina, Schroder, Thomas, Clarke, Simon, Braham, Louise
Format: Article
Published: Emerald 2016
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Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33756/
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author Capone, Georgina
Schroder, Thomas
Clarke, Simon
Braham, Louise
author_facet Capone, Georgina
Schroder, Thomas
Clarke, Simon
Braham, Louise
author_sort Capone, Georgina
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to review quantitative research since 1999 evaluating the effectiveness of democratic therapeutic community (DTC) treatment for individuals with personality disorders (PD) with reference to interpersonal and offending risk outcomes. Design/methodology/approach – A systematic search resulted in the review of ten studies. All of the studies investigated DTCs treating PD in community, inpatient residential and forensic settings. Only peer-reviewed, English-language articles employing a quantitative design were included. Findings – The majority of studies were conducted poorly and of low methodological quality, with limitations located in the representativeness of participants, limited use of control and comparison groups, follow up periods and controls for confounders. Heterogeneity remained in use of measures and limited consideration was given to the validity of interpersonal measures used. While improved interpersonal outcomes post DTC treatment were noted in forensic and residential settings, results were mixed in day and mini TC settings. Inconsistent findings in offending risk outcomes were also indicated. A study with increased methodological rigour indicated residential treatment had limited effects on interpersonal outcomes, when compared to combination treatment (residential TC and step-down treatment). Originality/value – The study provided an evaluation of the limitations of DTC research across a range of settings and highlighted a combination of residential TC and step-down treatment may achieve superior outcomes to residential TC treatment alone in a community inpatient population. Recommendations are made for future research to contribute to the treatment of PD.
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spelling nottingham-337562020-05-04T17:48:14Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33756/ Outcomes of therapeutic community treatment for personality disorder Capone, Georgina Schroder, Thomas Clarke, Simon Braham, Louise Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to review quantitative research since 1999 evaluating the effectiveness of democratic therapeutic community (DTC) treatment for individuals with personality disorders (PD) with reference to interpersonal and offending risk outcomes. Design/methodology/approach – A systematic search resulted in the review of ten studies. All of the studies investigated DTCs treating PD in community, inpatient residential and forensic settings. Only peer-reviewed, English-language articles employing a quantitative design were included. Findings – The majority of studies were conducted poorly and of low methodological quality, with limitations located in the representativeness of participants, limited use of control and comparison groups, follow up periods and controls for confounders. Heterogeneity remained in use of measures and limited consideration was given to the validity of interpersonal measures used. While improved interpersonal outcomes post DTC treatment were noted in forensic and residential settings, results were mixed in day and mini TC settings. Inconsistent findings in offending risk outcomes were also indicated. A study with increased methodological rigour indicated residential treatment had limited effects on interpersonal outcomes, when compared to combination treatment (residential TC and step-down treatment). Originality/value – The study provided an evaluation of the limitations of DTC research across a range of settings and highlighted a combination of residential TC and step-down treatment may achieve superior outcomes to residential TC treatment alone in a community inpatient population. Recommendations are made for future research to contribute to the treatment of PD. Emerald 2016-06-01 Article PeerReviewed Capone, Georgina, Schroder, Thomas, Clarke, Simon and Braham, Louise (2016) Outcomes of therapeutic community treatment for personality disorder. Therapeutic Communities: The International Journal of Therapeutic Communities, 37 (2). pp. 84-100. ISSN 0964-1866 Systematic review; Personality disorder; Offending; Outcome; Democratic therapeutic communities; Treatment intervention http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/TC-12-2015-0025 doi:10.1108/TC-12-2015-0025 doi:10.1108/TC-12-2015-0025
spellingShingle Systematic review; Personality disorder; Offending; Outcome; Democratic therapeutic communities; Treatment intervention
Capone, Georgina
Schroder, Thomas
Clarke, Simon
Braham, Louise
Outcomes of therapeutic community treatment for personality disorder
title Outcomes of therapeutic community treatment for personality disorder
title_full Outcomes of therapeutic community treatment for personality disorder
title_fullStr Outcomes of therapeutic community treatment for personality disorder
title_full_unstemmed Outcomes of therapeutic community treatment for personality disorder
title_short Outcomes of therapeutic community treatment for personality disorder
title_sort outcomes of therapeutic community treatment for personality disorder
topic Systematic review; Personality disorder; Offending; Outcome; Democratic therapeutic communities; Treatment intervention
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33756/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33756/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33756/