It is universally recognised that the treatment of personality disorder is a difficult and challenging task. The severity of psychopathology, characterised by a mixture of low tolerance for frustration, frequent acting-out behaviour, chaotic patterns of relating, affective instability and high degree of passive aggression (Reference KernbergKernberg, 1975), makes treatment compliance notoriously difficult to obtain. In this study we analysed data from subjects with a diagnosis of personality disorder according to DSM-III-R criteria (American Psychiatric Association, 1987) who were consecutively admitted to the Adult Unit of the Cassel Hospital over a 5-year period. A combined quantitative and qualitative approach was used, in order to reach an in-depth understanding of the possible factors underlying early termination of treatment. First, we compared a sample of early drop-outs with a sample of patients who continued their treatment, on demographic and clinical variables. Second, we analysed transcripts of in-depth interviews with a subsample of early drop-out patients to identify problem areas in their experience while in hospital. In recent years attention has been paid to the advantages of combining quantitative and qualitative elements for a better, and complementary, understanding of phenomena under study (Reference Mays and PopeMays & Pope, 1996; Reference Buston, Parry-Jones and LivingstoneBuston et al, 1998).
Previous studies
The literature on personality disorder shows high drop-out rates (44-66%) in hospital-based treatments (Reference Skodol, Buckley and CharlesSkodol et al, 1983; Reference Gunderson, Frank and RonningstamGunderson et al, 1989; Reference Kelly, Soloff and CorneliusKelly et al, 1992). These comparative studies found that attrition in borderline personality disorder (BPD) is significantly higher than in non-borderline personality disorder (NBDP), but some of their findings were contradictory. While Skodol et al (Reference Skodol, Buckley and Charles1983) found that drop-outs have had significantly more prior treatment, and had more severe symptoms at baseline, Gunderson et al (Reference Gunderson, Frank and Ronningstam1989) and Kelly et al (Reference Kelly, Soloff and Cornelius1992) showed opposite findings in their samples.
Systematic analysis of data which takes into account the views of the users of the service is included in only three studies of generic psychotherapy out-patient populations (Reference AcostaAcosta, 1980; Reference HynanHynan, 1990; Reference PekarikPekarik, 1992). To our knowledge, attrition studies that include a qualitative analysis have not yet been carried out in specialised in-patient psychotherapy units. We feel that this is a considerable gap in the literature, and that more studies in this area are needed to achieve a better understanding of early drop-out.
Hospital setting
The Cassel Hospital is renowned for employing a psychodynamically based approach to the treatment and management of personality disorder in adults, adolescents and whole families. Medium-term residential treatment in in-patient psychotherapy units may be indicated for personality disorder for which previous general psychiatric and out-patient psychotherapeutic treatment has failed. The advantages of in-patient treatment include better compliance with treatment, fostering of the therapeutic alliance, a systematic challenge to destructive behaviour, and containment of suicidal gestures (Reference WallersteinWallerstein, 1986; Reference Norton and HinshelwoodNorton & Hinshelwood, 1996). The combination of a specific sociotherapeutic programme (Reference ChapmanChapman, 1984), and individual twice-weekly psychotherapy delivered by medical and non-medical psychotherapists is the cornerstone of treatment at the Cassel. The hospital functions according to modified therapeutic community principles based on a ‘culture of enquiry’ (Reference MainMain, 1989). Patients are admitted to two different programmes, based on geographical considerations: those residing within the Greater London Area (GLA) are allocated to a two-stage model (6 months in hospital followed by 18 months' psychosocial outreach work), while subjects residing outside the GLA are allocated to a one-stage model (1-year hospital stay, with no out-patient follow-up). Most patients admitted are on psychotropic medication; this is continually monitored and gradually withdrawn as treatment progresses.
Although some components of treatment are unique, the hospital programme shares core structural and cultural dimensions with other therapeutic communities and in-patient psychotherapy units. In these settings, the impact of high dropout rates is considerable for various reasons. First, there is evidence that the longer the patient stays in treatment the more likely they are to benefit from it (Reference Waldinger and GundersonWaldinger & Gunderson, 1984; Reference Kelly, Soloff and CorneliusKelly et al, 1992). Second, the high demand made on health and social services (Reference Chiesa, Iacoponi and MorrisChiesa et al, 1996; Reference Dolan, Warren and MenziesDolan et al, 1996) by these patients would continue if specialised treatment failed. Third, the higher turnover resulting from patients terminating their treatment prematurely is considered to be unsettling for the stability of the milieu, the cohesion of the patients' group and their sense of belonging. A high incidence of early drop-out leads to low staff morale and a sense of worthlessness of the treatment offered, and to insecurity in the larger patients' community.
METHOD
Definition of early drop-out
Discontinuation of treatment is defined by a time frame that varies according to the expected length of treatment. In our study, early drop-out was defined as any premature termination of treatment, not mutually negotiated and agreed upon by staff and patient, that occurred within 14 weeks of admission. Previous findings indicate that early drop-outs do not benefit from psychosocial treatment (Reference HynanHynan, 1990; Reference Baruch, Gerber and FearonBaruch et al, 1998).
Study sample
Out of 134 consecutive patients admitted to the Cassel Hospital from January 1993 to July 1997, 42 (32%) left the hospital within 14 weeks. Only 14 patients (11%) dropped out of treatment after 14 weeks (but before completion of the course), two (1.5%) committed suicide while still in hospital and 76 (57%) completed the course of treatment.
Quantitative data collection
As part of a prospective outcome study (Reference Chiesa and FonagyChiesa & Fonagy, 2000) systematic information on all patients was obtained at intake, and at 6, 12 and 24 months. The following instruments were used: the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R (Reference Spitzer, Williams and GibbonSpitzer et al, 1990); the Symptom Checklist-90 (Reference DerogatisDerogatis, 1983); the Social Adjustment Scale (Reference WeissmanWeissman, 1975) and the Global Assessment Scale (Reference Endicott, Spitzer and FleissEndicott et al, 1976).
Statistical analysis
The statistical analyses were performed in SPSS for Windows (release 6.1). Chi-square was used to compare categorical variables between the early drop-out group and the group remaining; when the expected frequencies were below five, Fisher's exact test was used. Means were compared using the t-test for independent samples, except when distribution was not normal; then the Mann-Whitney U-test was performed. Logistic regression was used to determine the independent contribution of variables to early termination of treatment. Significance rested on a log likelihood test between the full model and one in which the main effect was removed.
Qualitative data collection
The 42 patients who left the hospital within 14 weeks were invited for a meeting with one of the researchers, to explore their experiences during their contact with the hospital. Nine patients refused the offer of a meeting, two were no longer alive, and nine could not be traced, while four declined to be interviewed on the grounds that they felt that they had little to contribute to the study. Eighteen patients (43%) accepted the invitation to meet with one of two researchers (C.D. and S.L.).
The method used was one of semi-structured in-depth interviews. The interviews were immediately dictated and subsequently transcribed. The three researchers subjected each transcription to content analysis, modelled on the method described by Miles & Huberman (Reference Miles and Huberman1994), which consists of highlighting sentence fragments that may indicate the presence of significant problem areas which the subject encountered during their stay at the hospital. Highlighted passages were subsequently organised according to problem area themes, which in turn were grouped into six general problem area categories. These categories represent a list of structural, cultural and process dimensions characteristic of the Cassel Hospital psychosocial approach. The transcripts were finally scored separately by two raters (C.D. and S.L.). An average 91% interrater agreement was reached.
RESULTS
Quantitative analysis
Univariate analysis showed a significant difference between early drop-outs and those remaining in level of occupation, borderline personality disorder status and the treatment programme to which they were allocated, and a nearly significant trend (P < 0.07) in educational status (Table 1). Patients who were employed in a skilled manual, partly skilled or unskilled occupation (the lower 3 levels) were significantly more likely to leave the hospital within 14 weeks of admission than those who held a higher and lesser professional or skilled non-manual occupation (top 3 levels) (χ2=6.11, P <0.01). A significantly lower attrition rate was found in patients meeting criteria for borderline personality disorder (BPD) when compared with those not having borderline personality disorder (NBPD) (χ2=6.91, P <0.01). Subjects allocated to the two-stage model of treatment showed a significantly lower early drop-out rate than subjects in the one-stage programme (χ2=4.73, P <0.03). A logistic regression model (Table 2) showed that all three terms in the equation (level of occupation, treatment allocation and borderline status) make a significant independent contribution to the prediction of early drop-out. The odds ratios of early drop-outs are 3.31 (95% CI 1.36-8.03), 2.50 (95% CI 1.01-6.25) and 2.50 (95% CI 1.35-7.69) for the lower v. the higher levels of occupation, for the one-stage v. the two-stage subjects, and for NBPD v. BPD respectively. Contingency tables showed that 36% (n=17) of those with BPD in the one-stage programme dropped out, compared with only 8% (n=3) in the two-stage programme. In the logistic regression model, a significant treatment allocation by BPD interaction was found (β= ‒1.72, s.e.=0.88, d.f.=1, P <0.05). The odds ratios of early drop-out show that those with BPD in the one-stage programme are 5.5 (95% CI 0.99-31.20) times more likely to drop out early in treatment than those with BPD in the two-stage programme.
Independent variables | Early drop-outs, n=42 | Continuers, n=92 |
---|---|---|
Age: mean (s.d.) | 33 (8.1) | 31 (7.5) |
Gender (female): n (%) | 31 (73.8) | 71 (77.2) |
Education (above GCSEs): n (%) | 23 (54.8) | 65 (70.7) |
Occupation (lower 3)*: n (%) | 20 (52.6) | 21 (28.8) |
Symptom Checklist-901: mean (s.d.) | 1.92 (0.69) | 1.91 (0.77) |
Social Adjustment Scale2: mean (s.d.) | 2.64 (0.49) | 2.65 (0.51) |
Serious suicide effort: n (%) | 7 (16.7) | 9 (9.8) |
Drug & alcohol abuse: n (%) | 14 (31.1) | 31 (68.9) |
Externally directed aggression: n (%) | 27 (30.0) | 9 (21.4) |
Length of previous hospitalisation (days): mean (s.d.) | 60.8 (85.5) | 49.7 (79.5) |
Number of previous hospitalisations: mean (s.d.) | 1.2 (1.9) | 0.7 (0.9) |
Time on medication (weeks): mean (s.d.) | 8.1 (5.1) | 8 (5.1) |
Number of personality disorders: mean (s.d.) | 3.65 (1.69) | 3.39 (1.82) |
Borderline personality disorder**: n (%) | 22 (44.0) | 18 (22.2) |
Treatment allocation* | ||
One-stage programme: n (%) | 29 (39.2) | 45 (60.8) |
Two-stage programme: n (%) | 13 (21.7) | 47 (78.3) |
Independent variable | Standardised coefficient (β) | s.e. of standardised coefficient | χ2, d.f.=1 |
---|---|---|---|
Level of occupation | 1.197 | 0.453 | 7.28* |
Borderline personality disorder | -1.192 | 0.452 | 7.30* |
Treatment allocation | -0.914 | 0.465 | 4.11** |
Treatment allocation by BPD | -1.72 | 0.882 | 4.10** |
Qualitative analysis
The analysis of the 18 available transcripts resulted in 50 positive scores on the area categories experienced as problematic (Table 3). Of these, 41 (82%) applied to three categories: institutional culture and structure, organisation of treatment and relationship with other patients. The main problems as perceived by patients can be summarised as follows.
Problem area categories | Problem area themes | Total score |
---|---|---|
Institutional culture and structure (overall treatment approach and philosophy of treatment) | Not feeling understood | 16 |
Undemocratic attitude | ||
Premature high expectations | ||
Rigid attitudes, lack of flexibility | ||
Separation from the outside world | ||
Overconfrontative attitude | ||
Overanalytical behaviour | ||
Organisation of treatment (how the treatment is structurally delivered on a day-to-day basis) | Time management | 14 |
Domestic chores | ||
Usefulness of group activities | ||
Too much responsibility | ||
Allocation to treatment programme | ||
Accommodation arrangements | ||
Relationship with other patients (living together, and patients' subculture) | Other patients' disturbance | 11 |
Lack of private space | ||
Scapegoating and backbiting | ||
Exclusion from the main group | ||
Relationship with key nurse | Not sufficiently available | 4 |
Lack of confidentiality | ||
Relationship with therapist | Therapist's gender | 4 |
Lack of trust | ||
Lack of confidentiality | ||
Other | Fear of research programme | 1 |
Cultural and structural set-up and general treatment approach
-
(a) Staff misunderstand patients' behaviour. Specifically, staff fail to appreciate the fears and vulnerabilities behind acting-out, aggressive behaviour and alcohol-related problems, which are approached in a moralistic and punitive fashion.
-
(b) The decision-making processes do not take patients' views sufficiently into account. Hospital staff ‘hide behind their role’ and are difficult to reach on a human level.
-
(c) Staff expect too much too soon from newly admitted patients, who are not given enough time to settle and get used to the pace of community life.
Treatment organisation and delivery
-
(a) Community life is incompatible with the need for privacy. Attempts to seek individual space are ‘frowned upon’ and challenged as a resistance to full involvement in treatment.
-
(b) Participation in hospital activities is felt as a compulsory duty, rather than a therapeutic tool.
-
(c) Small and large group meetings become all too often persecutory.
-
(d) Treatment delivery is not sufficiently flexible. Patients ‘are not treated as individuals’ with different backgrounds and individual needs, but are treated in a ‘standardised way’.
-
(e) The treatment approach and philosophy are not made sufficiently clear at admission; patients do not know ‘what to expect in therapy sessions or group meetings’.
Dimensions of living together in a therapeutic community
-
(a) Too much responsibility is placed on some patients to support acting-out patients. They become like ‘emotional sponges soaking up all the suicidal depression around them’.
-
(b) An anti-therapeutic patients' subculture was reported, including intimidation, bullying and backbiting from a dominant subgroup of patients.
DISCUSSION
The results from our sample show that a higher occupational status, having a borderline diagnosis and belonging to the two-stage programme are predictors of continuation of treatment. Education also shows a trend towards significance. Possibly, better educational and occupational status equips patients with greater resilience to withstand difficulties in the short term, in the hope of later positive results. This finding is consistent with Garfield's review (Reference Garfield, Bergin and Garfield1994), which identified social class variables as most consistently correlated with continuation in psychotherapy.
Borderline personality disorder and early drop-out
The superior in-patient treatment compliance showed by subjects with borderline personality disorder in the two-stage programme is an interesting finding. Since geographical factors and differences in the two populations have been excluded in two recent studies (Reference ChiesaChiesa, 1997; Reference Chiesa and FonagyChiesa & Fonagy, 2000), considerations of the treatment model may provide a possible explanation. A two-phase model may allow a better working-through of emotionally laden conflicts to do with termination and separation from treatment, which is established as a crucial feature in the treatment of BPD. The prospect of a shorter in-patient stay and an assured longer-term continuation of treatment as an out-patient may render more tolerable the claustrophobic and persecutory anxieties stirred by the intensely challenging and confrontational nature of the hospital psychosocial approach.
Clinical implications of qualitative analysis
The results from the analysis of the patients' experience of the hospital setting may have implications for clinical practice in therapeutic community settings. Most of the problem areas identified implicated the dimensions of the prevailing institutional culture, the way treatment was delivered and aspects of the patients' living together. A too uniform application of the treatment programme, which does not take into account individual differences, a rigidity in applying the rules and an excessive confrontational attitude at the expense of containment and understanding, constitute the main findings. This emerging pattern seems opposed to the declared hospital philosophy of treatment, which stresses understanding, enquiry into patient and staff dynamics, flexibility, constant dialogue and creative thinking. In therapeutic community and group settings, the coexistence of an unacknowledged (hence difficult to modify) authoritarian, moralistic and rigid culture with the therapeutic treatment philosophy is a constant danger (Reference MainMain, 1967; Reference Chiesa and Di FiorinoChiesa, 1990). The presence of a patients' subculture that involves ganging-up on individual patients, bullying, scapegoating and back-biting may not be addressed sufficiently by the staff. Indeed, published material only stresses the therapeutic dimension of living together in a group. This subculture also has anti-therapeutic effects, and may be an important contributing factor to patients leaving treatment prematurely.
Patients on the whole did not find their relationship with the individual therapist or key nurse a source of difficulties. The belief system developed over the years in hospital staff places the relationship between the psychotherapist and the patient's key nurse at the centre of the treatment strategy (Reference JamesJames, 1984). Specific supervisory arrangements to monitor the working relationship between nurse and therapist have been set up over the years. This study shows that those are not the problem areas as experienced by patients, and that the establishment of a non-problematic relationship between patient, psychotherapist and primary nurse does not ensure continuation in treatment. A change of focus may be needed, in the direction of reviewing and improving treatment structures, and the cultural attitudes and expectations of the staff.
Methodological considerations
Although we feel that this study makes an original contribution to the literature on early discontinuation of psychotherapeutic treatment, some limitations ought to be borne in mind when interpreting the results. First, the study was carried out on a selected sample of individuals with personality disorder admitted to a specialised in-patient setting from a wide geographical area. Although other therapeutic communities, which share a similar treatment philosophy and modality, may benefit from the results of this study, the generalisability of the findings to wider settings is limited.
Qualitative results are based on in-depth interviews conducted with a drop-out sample. To obtain a more comprehensive picture, data on the hospital experiences of the group remaining in hospital, for comparison with those of the drop-out group, are also needed. Preliminary results from a survey of treatment satisfaction of those who remained shows a significant degree of convergence of findings between them and the drop-outs. These results make a strong argument in favour of initiating a process of revision of the structural, cultural and organisational set-up of the hospital.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS AND LIMITATIONS
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
-
▪ A combined in-patient and out-patient model improves treatment compliance in borderline personality disorder.
-
▪ Ongoing critical enquiry into the cultural aspects of the in-patient setting, into the organisation of treatment delivery and into the subculture of the patients' group is required to improve the proportion of those who continue their treatment in a therapeutic community setting.
-
▪ The results may be relevant for other hospital-based settings concerned with personality disorder treatment and therapeutic communities.
LIMITATIONS
-
▪ Generalisability of results to a general psychiatric setting is limited.
-
▪ The qualitative part of the study needs to be extended to include a group of the patients who did not drop out, in order to reach more robust conclusions to guide clinical practice.
-
▪ The qualitative analysis is based only on the patients' viewpoint.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Sophia Rabe-Hesketh, PhD, provided help with statistical analysis; and we are grateful to the patients who agreed to be interviewed.
eLetters
No eLetters have been published for this article.