Personality Disorder

Working with Personality-disordered service users

There are many misconceptions around personality disorders. There isn’t even widespread agreement about whether they should properly be called mental disorders at all. Caught in the middle of all this, social care workers regularly find themselves 'between a rock and a hard place' with little or no real idea about what to do or how to get effective help.


This training acknowledges and then neatly side-steps ‘the PD debate’ and looks instead at the difficulties that these conditions cause in practice and what support workers can do both to protect themselves and to support their service-users. By applying theory to practice an a way that workers at all levels can get to grips with the course uses everyday awareness as a base from which to develop a realistic and practical set of skills that really can make a difference.

The course includes:

 What do we mean by personality disorder?
Borderline and Sociopathy - the personality disorders most commonly found in social care
Splitting
Secrecy and collusion
Deliberate Self Harm
Suicide
Risk to self and others
Practical interventions in social care
Falling between services
Getting help
Speak the right language

No previous knowledge or experience is necessary for the basic course.

More advanced training is also available for more experienced workers.

Both versions can be tailored to your particular requirements and delivered at the venue of your choice.

Contact AMJ on 07872 102626 for further information or Email Stuart direct on
stuartsorensen@msn.com


 

 

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