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The Journal of Psychotherapy Practice and Research logoLink to The Journal of Psychotherapy Practice and Research
. 1995 Summer;4(3):237–246.

The Family, Family Therapy, and Borderline Personality Disorder

IRA D GLICK 1, REBECCA A DULIT 1, EILEEN WACHTER 1, JOHN F CLARKIN 1
PMCID: PMC3330391  PMID: 22700254

Abstract

The authors review recent controlled studies on the interrelationship of the family and its members with borderline disorder and propose a new model for understanding and managing this relationship. The focus of the model is on psychopathology, evaluation, and treatment of patient and family as they influence each other. In the authors’ view this illness originates in cerebral dysfunction, in the patient in combination with impaired relationships among family members. When the family is available, we believe that the treatment of choice is a multimodal approach involving family psychoeducation and family systems or dynamic intervention where possible, in combination with medications, individual psychotherapy, or both.

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