Agency in avoidant personality disorder: a narrative review

Avoidant personality disorder (AvPD) is a highly prevalent personality disorder, especially in clinical settings, yet scarcely researched. People diagnosed with AvPD have severe impairments in functioning and suffer greatly, yet we still lack meta-analytic evidence for therapy and only a few RCTs ar...

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Published inFrontiers in psychology Vol. 14; p. 1248617
Main Authors Weme, Andrea Varga, Sørensen, Kristine Dahl, Binder, Per-Einar
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 18.09.2023
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Summary:Avoidant personality disorder (AvPD) is a highly prevalent personality disorder, especially in clinical settings, yet scarcely researched. People diagnosed with AvPD have severe impairments in functioning and suffer greatly, yet we still lack meta-analytic evidence for therapy and only a few RCTs are conducted. Patient factors are the most important for outcome in therapy, in general. Lack of agency might be a core deficit in people diagnosed with AvPD. Their conditions might be improved if we understand their agency better. We review previous research regarding psychological mechanisms and interpersonal relationships that facilitate or hinder agency in AvPD in daily life and psychotherapy. Summarizing original literature in a narrative review with reflexive thematic analysis. People diagnosed with AvPD seem to have significant impairments in their sense of agency due to a lack of emotional awareness, an overweight of inhibiting vs. activating emotions, and difficulties regulating emotions. Difficulties also seem related to high levels of attachment avoidance and fear, creating strong ambivalence in social needs, in addition to a strong tendency to subordinate to others. A weak sense of self with a poor narrative, self-doubt, and harsh self-critique makes a reflexive and intentional stand increasingly difficult for these people. This review gives a clinically meaningful understanding of core strengths and deficits in the personality functioning of AvPD that can help clinicians map out important therapeutic work, identify barriers to client-agency in therapy, and work through relational difficulties in the therapeutic alliance.
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Edited by: Nuno Conceicao, Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal
Reviewed by: Giancarlo Dimaggio, Centro di Terapia Metacognitiva Interpersonale (CTMI), Italy; Sebastian Simonsen, Region Hovedstad Psychiatry, Denmark; Bo Bach, Psychiatry Region Zealand, Denmark
ISSN:1664-1078
1664-1078
DOI:10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1248617