A complex systems perspective on chronic aggression and self-injury: Case study of a woman with mild intellectual disability and borderline personality disorder
Publication year
2024Author(s)
Number of pages
15 p.
Source
BMC Psychiatry, 24, (2024), article 378ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
SW OZ BSI ON
SW OZ BSI OLO
SW OZ BSI CW
SW OW PWO [owi]
SW OZ BSI OGG
Journal title
BMC Psychiatry
Volume
vol. 24
Languages used
English (eng)
Subject
Communication and Media; Developmental Psychopathology; Learning and Plasticity; Social DevelopmentAbstract
Background: Challenging behaviors like aggression and self-injury are dangerous for clients and staff in residential care. These behaviors are not well understood and therefore often labeled as "complex". Yet it remains vague what this supposed complexity entails at the individual level. This case-study used a three-step mixed-methods analytical strategy, inspired by complex systems theory. First, we construed a holistic summary of relevant factors in her daily life. Second, we described her challenging behavioral trajectory by identifying stable phases. Third, instability and extraordinary events in her environment were evaluated as potential change-inducing mechanisms between different phases. Case presentation: A woman, living at a residential facility, diagnosed with mild intellectual disability and borderline personality disorder, who shows a chronic pattern of aggressive and self-injurious incidents. She used ecological momentary assessments to self-rate challenging behaviors daily for 560 days. Conclusions: A qualitative summary of caretaker records revealed many internal and environmental factors relevant to her daily life. Her clinician narrowed these down to 11 staff hypothesized risk- and protective factors, such as reliving trauma, experiencing pain, receiving medical care or compliments. Coercive measures increased the chance of challenging behavior the day after and psychological therapy sessions decreased the chance of self-injury the day after. The majority of contemporaneous and lagged associations between these 11 factors and self-reported challenging behaviors were non-significant, indicating that challenging behaviors are not governed by mono-causal if-then relations, speaking to its complex nature. Despite this complexity there were patterns in the temporal ordering of incidents. Aggression and self-injury occurred on respectively 13% and 50% of the 560 days. On this timeline 11 distinct stable phases were identified that alternated between four unique states: high levels of aggression and self-injury, average aggression and self-injury, low aggression and self-injury, and low aggression with high self-injury. Eight out of ten transitions between phases were triggered by extraordinary events in her environment, or preceded by increased fluctuations in her self-ratings, or a combination of these two. Desirable patterns emerged more often and were less easily malleable, indicating that when she experiences bad times, keeping in mind that better times lie ahead is hopeful and realistic.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [244001]
- Electronic publications [130996]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [30023]
- Open Access publications [105058]
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