Title: Personality in individuals with mild intellectual disability to borderline intellectual functioning: a comparative study
Abstract: Purpose This study aims to investigate the distinctive personality traits and characteristics of individuals with borderline intellectual functioning (BIF) and mild intellectual disability (MID) within specialized centers for MID-BIF treatment and care compared with individuals without MID-BIF diagnosis gathered from general mental health care (GMH) settings. Design/methodology/approach Patients classified with MID-BIF ( n = 58), most with comorbid psychopathology, were thoroughly interviewed by trained clinicians who afterward completed the Shedler–Westen Assessment Procedure (SWAP-200) about the patient. The authors compared SWAP-200 profiles of MID-BIF patients with profiles of GMH individuals. In addition, the authors have compared these profiles for the MID and BIF groups (differentiated based on previously known intelligence quotient scores). Findings Results show significantly higher scores for the MID-BIF group than the GMH group on scales encompassing emotional instability, impulsivity and antagonism. On scales containing constraint and healthy traits, significantly lower scores were found for the MID-BIF group than for the GMH group. Importance of including SWAP-200 personality assessment for a more comprehensive understanding and treatment planning for individuals with MID-BIF is discussed. Originality/value This study offers insights into personality within individuals with an MID-BIF diagnosis, compared with individuals in a GMH setting.
Publication Year: 2024
Publication Date: 2024-02-19
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref']
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Cited By Count: 1
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