Recently several young
people approached me and asked if I could help them understand the difference between BPD and
APD—because they had heard that these two conditions varied in incidence based
on gender. With all the acronyms floating around these days I thought it
prudent to ask what those two represented in their vocabularies. They laughed
and said, "We wondered if you would make an assumption or ask a question." [They had heard me talk about JOT behaviors, the 'J' representing 'jumping to conclusions.'] It turned out that a classmate had been diagnosed with Borderline Personality
Disorder or BPD and they wanted to know how that differed from Antisocial
Personality Disorder or APD. Interestingly enough, I had just spent some time
with a cousin of mine who happens to have spent the last fifty years as a
practicing psychiatrist; and who went into the field after a student at the
same University committed suicide. In the conversation my cousin mentioned that
in his experience BPD is diagnosed much more commonly in females and that
likely APD is the male equivalent, it being diagnosed much more commonly in
males. More tomorrow.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment