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Del Buono G: Classificazione e diagnosi dei disturbi di personalità. Introduzione: Categorie e dimensioni. In: NeaMente Journal, no 0, 2022. (Tipo: Journal Article | Abstract | Links: )@article{nokey, This paper would introduce the approach to the diagnosis of personality disorders of ICD-11, that is the International Classification of Diseases, edited by World Health Organization (WHO). ICD-11 has embraced a fully dimensional approach to the diagnosis of personality disorders: all diagnostic categories (borderline, paranoid, narcissistic, etc.) are suppressed and an only personality disorder is left. At first, the clinician is required to evaluate wheth¬er the individual’s clinical presentation meets the general diag¬nostic requirements for personality disorder, with evaluation of personality global functioning, focusing on the impairment of self and interpersonal functioning. The task of clinician is to determine the degree and pervasiveness of disturbances of self and interpersonal functioning. In the following step, the clinician determines whether a diagnosis of mild, moderate or severe personality disorder is appropriate. In addition, the user have the possibility to code a sub-clinic level: Personality Difficulty. This manual also includes the option of specifying a Borderline Pattern Qualifier, adapted from the DSM-5 criteria for Borderline Personality Disorder. Furthermore, personality disorders are described by indi¬cating the presence of maladaptive personality traits. Five trait domains are included: negative affectivity, detachment, dissociality, disinhibition, and anankastia. These trait qualifiers describe the individual patterns of personality that contribute to the global personality dysfunction. |
[publications auth={all} subj={all} prep={all}]
2022
G, Del Buono: Classificazione e diagnosi dei disturbi di personalità. Introduzione: Categorie e dimensioni. In: NeaMente Journal, no 0, 2022. (Tipo: Journal Article | Abstract | Links | BibTeX) @article{nokey,
title = {Classificazione e diagnosi dei disturbi di personalità. Introduzione: Categorie e dimensioni},
author = {Del Buono G},
url = {https://journal.neamente.com/classificazione-e-diagnosi-dei-disturbi-di-personalita/},
year = {2022},
date = {2022-02-05},
urldate = {2022-02-05},
journal = {NeaMente Journal},
number = {0},
abstract = {This paper would introduce the approach to the diagnosis of personality disorders of ICD-11, that is the International Classification of Diseases, edited by World Health Organization (WHO). ICD-11 has embraced a fully dimensional approach to the diagnosis of personality disorders: all diagnostic categories (borderline, paranoid, narcissistic, etc.) are suppressed and an only personality disorder is left.
At first, the clinician is required to evaluate wheth¬er the individual’s clinical presentation meets the general diag¬nostic requirements for personality disorder, with evaluation of personality global functioning, focusing on the impairment of self and interpersonal functioning. The task of clinician is to determine the degree and pervasiveness of disturbances of self and interpersonal functioning. In the following step, the clinician determines whether a diagnosis of mild, moderate or severe personality disorder is appropriate. In addition, the user have the possibility to code a sub-clinic level: Personality Difficulty. This manual also includes the option of specifying a Borderline Pattern Qualifier, adapted from the DSM-5 criteria for Borderline Personality Disorder. Furthermore, personality disorders are described by indi¬cating the presence of maladaptive personality traits. Five trait domains are included: negative affectivity, detachment, dissociality, disinhibition, and anankastia. These trait qualifiers describe the individual patterns of personality that contribute to the global personality dysfunction.},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
This paper would introduce the approach to the diagnosis of personality disorders of ICD-11, that is the International Classification of Diseases, edited by World Health Organization (WHO). ICD-11 has embraced a fully dimensional approach to the diagnosis of personality disorders: all diagnostic categories (borderline, paranoid, narcissistic, etc.) are suppressed and an only personality disorder is left.
At first, the clinician is required to evaluate wheth¬er the individual’s clinical presentation meets the general diag¬nostic requirements for personality disorder, with evaluation of personality global functioning, focusing on the impairment of self and interpersonal functioning. The task of clinician is to determine the degree and pervasiveness of disturbances of self and interpersonal functioning. In the following step, the clinician determines whether a diagnosis of mild, moderate or severe personality disorder is appropriate. In addition, the user have the possibility to code a sub-clinic level: Personality Difficulty. This manual also includes the option of specifying a Borderline Pattern Qualifier, adapted from the DSM-5 criteria for Borderline Personality Disorder. Furthermore, personality disorders are described by indi¬cating the presence of maladaptive personality traits. Five trait domains are included: negative affectivity, detachment, dissociality, disinhibition, and anankastia. These trait qualifiers describe the individual patterns of personality that contribute to the global personality dysfunction.2022
G, Del Buono
Classificazione e diagnosi dei disturbi di personalità. Introduzione: Categorie e dimensioni Journal Article
In: NeaMente Journal, no 0, 2022.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tag: Disturbi di personalità, DSM-5, Funzionamento del Sé, Funzionamento interpersonale, ICD-11, Psicopatologia, Psicopatologie
@article{nokey,
title = {Classificazione e diagnosi dei disturbi di personalità. Introduzione: Categorie e dimensioni},
author = {Del Buono G},
url = {https://journal.neamente.com/classificazione-e-diagnosi-dei-disturbi-di-personalita/},
year = {2022},
date = {2022-02-05},
urldate = {2022-02-05},
journal = {NeaMente Journal},
number = {0},
abstract = {This paper would introduce the approach to the diagnosis of personality disorders of ICD-11, that is the International Classification of Diseases, edited by World Health Organization (WHO). ICD-11 has embraced a fully dimensional approach to the diagnosis of personality disorders: all diagnostic categories (borderline, paranoid, narcissistic, etc.) are suppressed and an only personality disorder is left.
At first, the clinician is required to evaluate wheth¬er the individual’s clinical presentation meets the general diag¬nostic requirements for personality disorder, with evaluation of personality global functioning, focusing on the impairment of self and interpersonal functioning. The task of clinician is to determine the degree and pervasiveness of disturbances of self and interpersonal functioning. In the following step, the clinician determines whether a diagnosis of mild, moderate or severe personality disorder is appropriate. In addition, the user have the possibility to code a sub-clinic level: Personality Difficulty. This manual also includes the option of specifying a Borderline Pattern Qualifier, adapted from the DSM-5 criteria for Borderline Personality Disorder. Furthermore, personality disorders are described by indi¬cating the presence of maladaptive personality traits. Five trait domains are included: negative affectivity, detachment, dissociality, disinhibition, and anankastia. These trait qualifiers describe the individual patterns of personality that contribute to the global personality dysfunction.},
keywords = {Disturbi di personalità, DSM-5, Funzionamento del Sé, Funzionamento interpersonale, ICD-11, Psicopatologia, Psicopatologie},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
This paper would introduce the approach to the diagnosis of personality disorders of ICD-11, that is the International Classification of Diseases, edited by World Health Organization (WHO). ICD-11 has embraced a fully dimensional approach to the diagnosis of personality disorders: all diagnostic categories (borderline, paranoid, narcissistic, etc.) are suppressed and an only personality disorder is left.
At first, the clinician is required to evaluate wheth¬er the individual’s clinical presentation meets the general diag¬nostic requirements for personality disorder, with evaluation of personality global functioning, focusing on the impairment of self and interpersonal functioning. The task of clinician is to determine the degree and pervasiveness of disturbances of self and interpersonal functioning. In the following step, the clinician determines whether a diagnosis of mild, moderate or severe personality disorder is appropriate. In addition, the user have the possibility to code a sub-clinic level: Personality Difficulty. This manual also includes the option of specifying a Borderline Pattern Qualifier, adapted from the DSM-5 criteria for Borderline Personality Disorder. Furthermore, personality disorders are described by indi¬cating the presence of maladaptive personality traits. Five trait domains are included: negative affectivity, detachment, dissociality, disinhibition, and anankastia. These trait qualifiers describe the individual patterns of personality that contribute to the global personality dysfunction.