[Dr. Conner is the Director for Planning and
Program Development for Mentor Research Institute, a
non-profit public health and safety organization (www. OregonCounseling. Org).
Dr. Conner has worked in private practice, primary
medical care, emergency psychiatric services,
inpatient psychiatry, outpatient mental health
services and health education.
One of the most severe and challenging mental health
problems to treat is a complicated problem found
almost exclusively in females called Borderline
Personality Disorder (BPD). It can be detected
as early as middle to late adolescence, and may have
genetic and endocrine related causes.
The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorder (DSM), and the American Psychiatric
Association advise waiting until a teenager has
reached 18 years of age before diagnosing BPD. Prior
to that time the symptoms associated with this
disorder are referred to as Borderline Personality
Traits (BPT). Generally there is a better
prognosis when BPT is detected in adolescence, rather
than when the person has reached maturity and
adulthood.
(See “A Criticism of America’s Diagnostic Bible – The
DSM” www. OregonCounseling. Org/Diagnosis /CriticismOfDSM .htm
and Woodbury Reports July 99 #59)
The behaviors associated with Borderline Personality
Traits (BPT) can be a serious problem to address in a
wilderness therapy program. In many cases, the
“diagnosis” has not been made prior to admission, but
the symptoms associated with BPT will become evident
and more pronounced after admission. Failure to
recognize and respond appropriately can exhaust field
staff, diminish the benefits that other students might
otherwise gain and can contribute to alarming and life
threatening behavior.
In early stages, the symptoms of BPT appear more like
Depression, Conduct Disorder (CD) or Oppositional and
Defiant Disorder (ODD). Efforts to address CD and ODD
while not recognizing BPT can lead to a pattern of
Decompensation and Failure to thrive for students
admitted to a wilderness program. [Decompensation, as
defined by Conner in his article in Woodbury Reports
Sept # 61, can take many forms, normally involving the
onset of childlike behavior, a complete lack of regard
for hygiene, loss of bladder control while sleeping,
increasingly disorganized behavior, a dramatic change
in the level of energy, or a complete loss of interest
in pleasurable activities.]
(See www. OregonCounseling. Org/Wilderness /Decompensation .htm)
Failure to recognize BPT in a wilderness program can
lead to chronic problems and can have a destructive
impact on a child’s life. Many young girls with the
initial behavioral symptoms of this disorder will go
undetected primarily because they can hide these
behaviors from parents and family members, since such
behavior is generally not evident until the child is
stressed and is able to be continuously observed by
therapists in a structured setting. In a wilderness
program, a student may not demonstrate all of their
symptoms until the third or fourth week.
Students with Borderline Personality Traits are: very
vulnerable, usually over-react to stress,
characteristically form unstable and intense
“love-hate” relationships, and are prone to view their
caretakers as either “all-good”, or if problems occur,
as “all-bad.” They may initially view their caregiver
as a “rescuer” then suddenly switch and view them as
the “villain.” It is crucial that caregivers avoid
falling into the trap of being idealized and
overvalued by the student, and then being pitted
against other caregivers who the student hates.
The psychological and emotional needs of children
with BPT are rarely satisfied, except briefly, and
their anger over this eventually alienates their
friends and peers. The response toward caregivers who
do not know how to respond is usually one of
frustration and anger. At the same time, students with
BPT will make frantic efforts to avoid real or
imagined abandonment. The resulting message to a
caregiver is “I hate you! Don’t leave me!” This mixed
message creates further distress in their life and the
life of others.
Behavior That Will Be Encountered In The Field:
1.) Intense emotional pain (shame,
guilt, fear, loneliness, emptiness, longing)
2.) Rapid mood swings (anger, sad,
fearful to happy) Anyone’s failure to meet their needs
is interpreted and reported to others as personal,
intentional, neglectful or abusive.
3.) Interpreting their experience as
either “good” or “bad” instead of accepting that which
is actually “grey”, “mixed” or “good enough”
4.) Building and maintaining
relationships with other students and staff by
creating a common enemy or sharing their criticism of
program activities
5.) Progress or improved emotional well
being will trigger thoughts about how bad they have
felt in the past and that their positive emotional
state will not last.
6.) Reports to staff create the
impression that the student is misunderstood, a
victim, unloved, ignored or has been abused.
Caregivers and peers will be drawn into and expected
to rescue, take sides or take action to protect the
student from “bad” people in their life.
7.) Idealization of select staff and
students in order to form and benefit from that
relationship
8.) Recurrent inability to tolerate
their emotional state followed by escape and avoidance
behaviors such as medication seeking, inflicting pain
through scratching or picking, self-mutilation, acting
immature, becoming quasi- psychotic, or “acting out of
control” to create a physical altercation and
“emotional release.”
9.) Decompensation in response to
program structure, expectations and their inability to
escape and avoid their “here and now” responsibility
and emotional experience
Program Therapeutics
The program should focus on solving the student’s
“here-and- now” problems, despite the student’s
tendency to avoid reality-oriented problem-solving.
Group counseling or therapy should be supportive and
not exploratory, with arrangements for backup in
place, should severe regression, dangerous or
psychotic behavior surface.
Regardless of the type of therapy used, two important
issues in the program must be addressed:
1.) Setting appropriate limits
2.) Reality-oriented
problem-solving
Students with BPT must learn how to limit their
behavior and they must learn how to respect the limits
of what others can provide. It is essential that their
caregivers set boundaries and not rescue students, as
well as tolerate the student’s angry outbursts with
patience, compassion and confidence. This will
demonstrate to the student that the caregiver will not
rescue or abandon the student (as the student angrily
expects and fears). Children with BPT must slowly
learn to overcome their overuse of fantasy and
problem-avoidance. A high degree of repeated
confrontation can lead to decompensation. In many
cases, a student’s acting out can become so dangerous
that treatment in a wilderness therapy program can
become impossible. Program staff and caregivers must
be able to tolerate repeated episodes of a student’s
rage, distrust, and fear. Students with severe or
advanced BPT can demand more attention than all of the
students in a camp combined.
The therapeutic community within a wilderness therapy
program is a 24 hour living and learning experience,
where daily interactions in the community are examined
and unhealthy behavior is challenged. A wilderness
program has many components where individual therapy,
groups, active student participation in the
maintenance of the community and constant monitoring
of group processes can be used to confront and
redirect the behavior associated with Borderline
Personality Traits.
Crisis Hospitalization
Children with BPT who exhibit regressive behavior,
suicide attempts or brief psychotic episodes are
frequently hospitalized.
Most emergency departments that are medical and not
psychiatric are unable to recognize or respond with
appropriate understanding of the needs of student with
BPT. Students with BPT are prone to sincerely
fabricate and report abuse and neglect by caregivers,
parents and program staff. The emergency room staff
must be careful not to let borderline students pit the
hospital staff against the student’s parents,
counselors, therapists and staff in their treatment
program. Brief admissions have been found to be more
effective than long-term admission.
Medications
The use of medications, especially an initial trial
of a medication in a wilderness program is very
problematic, and should generally be considered for
symptom relief, not “cure.” Starting a student on a
medication while in a wilderness setting requires
trained staff to monitor the student’s mental and
medical status for side effects, and to avoid
potentially life- threatening interactions with
certain foods.
Recommendations
1.) Prospective students for admission
with Borderline Personality Traits should be carefully
screened by a qualified mental health professional who
is familiar with the stress and therapeutic structure
of the particular wilderness program. It is essential
that the program provide a therapeutic community and
maintains the level of individual supervision
appropriate to the student’s needs.
2.) Students with BPT considered most
likely to benefit from wilderness therapy must
demonstrate considerable motivation to address their
problems and be willing and able to co-operate in the
group life of the community. Students admitted to a
program should be free of medication. This will
restrict admission to those without acute problems or
co-morbid chronic mental illness, thus severely
limiting the number of students with BPT for whom the
wilderness option may be considered.
3.) In the event that a student with BPT
is admitted, or a diagnosis is made after admission,
staff interactions should focus on the student’s
“here-and-now” problems despite the student’s
psychological “escape” behavior and their tendency to
avoid reality-oriented problem-solving. Staff should
avoid in- depth, exploratory or insight oriented
interactions for students with BPT. Discharge without
completion of the program will be necessary for some
students.
4.) Program goals for students with BPT
should be in terms of supporting gains toward more
independent functioning, and not changing their
personality. Graduation and placement in follow- up
outpatient treatment, a residential treatment program
or a therapeutic boarding school will be essential to
maintain the gains provided by a wilderness therapy
program.