Avoidant Personality Disorder Treatment
Table of Contents
Psychotherapy for Avoidant Personality Disorder
As with most
personality disorders, the
treatment of choice is
psychotherapy.
While individual therapy is usually the preferred modality, group therapy can be
useful if the client can agree to attend enough sessions. Because of the basic
components of this disorder, though, it is often difficult to have the
individual attend group therapy early on in the therapeutic process. It is a
modality to consider as the patient approaches termination of individual
treatment, if additional therapy seems necessary and beneficial to the client.
Individuals who suffer from
avoidant personality disorder typically have
poor self-esteem and
issues surrounding any type of social interactions. They often see only the
negative in life and have difficulty in looking at situations and interactions
in an objective manner. This can also interfere with their self-report when they
present for an initial evaluation, which can lead to important life history and
medical information being missed (because the patient deems it and him or
herself too unimportant to bother). It is necessary to take a more detailed
evaluation than usual, while doing so in a relatively unobtrusive fashion. The
clinician should be sensitive to nonverbal cues of the client during this
session, to evaluate when information is being withheld. This is essential to
making a differential diagnosis with similar-looking but vitally different
disorders, such as someone who suffers from schizoid or borderline personality
disorder. As with other personality disorder, the individual is not likely to
present him or herself to therapy unless something has gone wrong in their life
with which their dysfunctional personality style cannot adequately cope.
As with other personality disorders, psychotherapy is usually most effective
when it is relatively short-term and oriented toward finding solutions to
specific life problems. While self-esteem issues will undoubtedly present
themselves in treatment, serious self-enhancement is unlikely. The negative
self-valuation is a life-long, pervasive cognition not conducive to regular
methods of increasing one's self-esteem. As with all therapy, a solid
therapeutic relationship founded with good rapport and listening to the client
is important to the therapist's effectiveness.
Forming initial rapport is likely to be more difficult with someone who has
this disorder, since early termination is often an issue. Once rapport is
formed, therapy is usually quite stable, unless issues are brought up which are
extremely difficult for the client to deal with. Care should be used by the
clinician in exploring new material, therefore.
Termination of therapy is an important issue as well, because a successful
ending to therapy and the therapeutic relationship reinforces the possibility of
new relationships.
As with all personality disorders, medications should only be prescribed for
specific and acute Axis I diagnoses or problems suffered by the individual.
Anti-anxiety agents and
antidepressants should be prescribed only when there is
a clear Axis I diagnosis in conjunction with the personality disorder.
Physicians should resist the temptation to overprescribe to someone with this
disorder, because they often present with complaints of anxiety in social
situations or a feeling of disconnectedness with their feelings. The anxiety in
this instance is clearly situationally-related and medication may actually
interfere with effective psychotherapeutic treatment.
Self-Help for Avoidant Personality Disorder
There are not any self-help support groups or communities that we are aware
of that would be conducive to someone suffering from this disorder. Such
approaches would likely not be very effective because a person with this
disorder is likely to avoid attending such sessions, due to increased anxiety
and difficulty interacting socially.
more on Avoidant Personality Disorder
Treatment
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Reviewed: 4/2006
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