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Histrionic personality disorder as pseudo‐learning disability
Journal of Intellectual Disability Research, 1995AbstractThe case of a 20‐year‐old woman with a histrionic personality disorder is described. She claims to have a mild learning disability, and indeed, is receiving special college education for people with learning disabilities and has a specialist learning disability social worker, despite being of above average intelligence.
S A, Cooper, R A, Collacott
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Dependent and Histrionic Personality Disorders
2008Abstract Observant clinicians and empirical researchers have long recognized that dependent personality disorder (DPD) and histrionic personality disorder (HPD) share at least one important feature: both are rooted in exaggerated, infl exible dependency needs. Dependency-related behaviors are present in both sets of diagnostic critera as
Robert F Bornstein, Iris L Malka
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The Death of Histrionic Personality Disorder
2012Histrionic personality disorder (HPD) is a diagnosis in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, text revision (DSM-IV-TR) and the International Classification of Diseases, tenth edition (ICD-10). The first section of this chapter defines HPD and discusses its history, starting with hysteria.
Roger K. Blashfield +2 more
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Interventions in a heart transplant recipient with a histrionic personality disorder
Journal of Transplant Coordination, 1999Organ transplantation is a psychosocially demanding process. Patients must undergo a comprehensive evaluation to await a donor organ that may never become available. After transplantation, recipients must deal with the acceptance of a new organ and comply with a medical regimen that includes numerous medications, follow-up exams, and procedures ...
C, Smith +7 more
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Histrionic and Narcissistic Personality Disorders
2004In keeping with the drama inherent in this personality disorder, Histrionic Personality Disorder, itself, has had a dramatic history. The use of the term “histrionic” is relatively recent. Originally, the term used to describe this disorder was “Hysterical Personality.” The use of the term “hysteria” has varied widely over its 4000-year history and has
Arthur Freeman +3 more
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Dependent and Histrionic Personality Disorders
1993The categories of histrionic and dependent personality disorders have two major themes in common. First, both have their origins in early psychoanalytic writings on character structure. Second, both concepts have been associated with women. This chapter provides a historical review of the psychoanalytic ideas associated with these personality disorder ...
Roger K. Blashfield, Roger T. Davis
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Histrionic, Narcissistic, and Dependent Personality Disorders
2005All of the DSM-IV personality disorders share at least some features in common (e.g., impaired interpersonal relationships, distortions in selfconcept). Numerous classification systems have been proposed to organize personality disorder pathology into categories, dimensions, or clusters that would share certain underlying commonalities and would be ...
Thomas A. Widiger, Robert F. Bornstein
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Psychotherapy for histrionic personality disorder.
The Journal of psychotherapy practice and research, 1997The author uses a configurational analysis method for case formulation and to establish links between individualized formulation and treatment techniques. A prototype of formulation for the histrionic personality disorder is presented, using theories for formulation about states of mind, defensive control processes, and person schemas. A phase-oriented
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