Title of article :
Cognitive Emotion Regulation Strategies in Prisoners With Borderline Personality Disorder
Author/Authors :
Lotfi ، Mozhgan Department of Mental Health - School of Behavioral Sciences and Mental Health (Tehran Institute of Psychiatry) - Iran University of Medical Sciences , amini ، Mahdi Addiction Department - School of Behavioral Sciences and Mental Health (Tehran Institute of Psychiatry) - Iran University of Medical Sciences , Fathi ، Asghar Department of Criminal Law and Criminology - Tehran Prisons Office , Karami ، Adel Department of Psychology - Tehran Prisons office , Ghiasi ، Saleh Department of Psychology - Tehran Prisons office , sadeghi ، shahin Department of Clinical Psychology - University of Social Welfare and Rehabilitation Sciences
Abstract :
Objective: The main aim of this study was to examine the cognitive emotion regulation strategies among prisoners with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) and compare those with the normal population, by achieving the patterns of the implemented strategies between the BPD prisoners. Methods: Ninety prisoners with BPD and 92 non-clinical individuals participated in this study. A Structured Clinical Interview (SCID-II) was used to diagnosis of BPD, and the cognitive emotion regulation strategies were evaluated by the Cognitive Emotion Regulation Questionnaire (CERQ). The data were analyzed by independent t test and correlation coefficient via SPSS-16 software. Results: Independent t-test and correlations analyses showed that cognitive emotion regulation strategies differed in BPD as compared to normal samples, and also showed that self-blame, catastrophization, other blames and rumination strategies exhibited the largest associations with BPD (rs=0.40, 0.38, 0.34 and 0.33, respectively). Conclusion: The findings showed that the cognitive emotion regulation strategies, especially maladaptive cognitive emotion regulation strategies, had significant relation with BPD symptoms. So, these maladaptive cognitive-emotional components may, therefore, play an essential role in the interventional strategies.
Keywords :
Emotion , Emotion regulation , Borderline personality disorder , Prisoners
Journal title :
Practice in Clinical Psychology
Journal title :
Practice in Clinical Psychology