RESUMO
OBJECTIVES: Screening and diagnostic instruments for Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) are not validated in people aged over 60. We report a pilot study examining the sensitivity and specificity of a de-novo screening instrument in older adults. METHODS: The BPD-OA screening tool incorporates DSM 5 and literature describing the expression of BPD in older adults. This study was conducted using a case control design. The Diagnostic Interview for Borderlines-Revised (DIB-R) and the McLean Screening Instrument for BPD (MSI-BPD) were used as comparators. Comprehensive assessment by psychiatric teams determined participants to be (i) BPD-positive (n = 22) or (ii) BPD-negative (gender matched; n = 21). RESULTS: The BPD-OA was the most sensitive instrument for discriminating older adult BPD from non-BPD participants (sensitivity = 0.82). No significant relationship was found between the BPD-OA score and age in BPD-diagnosed participants (r = -0.181, n = 21, p = .432). Participant age explained 3.2% of the variance in BPD-OA scores. Of the 21 BPD-negative participants, eight false positives experienced prominent mood disorders (specificity = 0.62). CONCLUSIONS: The BPD-OA screening tool is clearly superior to instruments validated for use in younger people. Further refinement and evaluation will enhance its sensitivity and specificity. CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS: Detection of BPD in older adult care settings will improve outcomes for patients, families, and staff through better understanding and appropriate management and treatment strategies.
RESUMO
This study examines the need for, and outcomes of, a psychotherapeutic skills training programme, within an acute psychogeriatric unit. Nursing staff were surveyed to explore their training needs in psychotherapeutic skills with inpatients diagnosed with depressive, anxiety, or neurocognitive disorders. Staff were then invited to participate in a focus group (n = 6) to identify content of such training, possible barriers, and an implementation strategy. Next, to ascertain the feasibility and acceptability of such training, materials and schedules were developed and piloted with a small group of nurses (n = 8), before being administered to nurses across the unit (n = 23). Impacts of training on the confidence and competence of nurses to use such skills were investigated. Of nurses surveyed (n = 20), 80% wanted to use psychotherapeutic skills in routine practice, but only 35% had received training in such skills in the last 5 years. Focus group results identified that nurses wanted training in skills related to engaging patients, responding to resistance from patients, problem solving, reminiscence, relaxation, and cognitive behaviour therapy. Nurses who underwent the pilot training reported increases in confidence and competence in using such skills. These findings were replicated in the unit-wide training programme and were found to be durable across a 3-month follow-up period. This study highlighted the training needs of nurses working in an inpatient psychogeriatric setting, approaches to implementing new skills, and benefits of training for nurses' levels of confidence and competence in using psychotherapeutic skills.