Recovery and borderline personality disorder: A description of the innovative open borders program
Mortimer-Jones, S.M., Morrison, P.ORCID: 0000-0002-3389-8393, Munib, A., Paolucci, F., Neale, S., Bostwick, A. and Hungerford, C.
(2016)
Recovery and borderline personality disorder: A description of the innovative open borders program.
Issues in Mental Health Nursing, 37
(9).
pp. 624-630.
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Abstract
Although Recovery-oriented approaches to delivering mental health services are now promoted in health services across the globe, there is an ongoing need to adapt these approaches to meet the unique needs of consumers with a diagnosis of borderline personality disorder. The lived experience of borderline personality disorder includes emotional dysregulation, intense and unstable relationships, self-harming behaviours, fear of abandonment, and a limited capacity to cope with stress. These experiences present a range of challenges for those who deliver Recovery-oriented services and advocate the principles of empowerment and self-determination. This paper describes a novel crisis intervention program, “Open Borders,” which has been established to meet the unique needs of people with a borderline personality disorder diagnosis. Open Borders is a Recovery-oriented model that is run at a public, state-wide residential facility for mental health consumers in Western Australia, and offers alternative pathways to achieving mental health Recovery, including self-referral and short-term admission to a residential facility. The aims of the program are to break the cycle of hospital admission, reduce rates of self-harm, and support the complex Recovery journey of consumers with a diagnosis of borderline personality disorder. Open Borders provides an exemplar for other health service organisations seeking to establish Recovery-oriented crisis intervention alternatives.
Item Type: | Journal Article |
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Murdoch Affiliation(s): | Sir Walter Murdoch School of Public Policy and International Affairs School of Health Professions |
Publisher: | Taylor & Francis |
Copyright: | © 2016 Taylor & Francis |
URI: | http://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/31997 |
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