Cluster C personality disorders

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Cluster C personality disorders

Mental Health

Mental Health

Mental health care settings: Nursing
Therapeutic communication: Nursing
Stress and coping: Nursing
Crisis intervention: Nursing
Defense mechanisms: Nursing
Physical assessment - Mental status: Nursing
Suicide: Nursing
Case study - Suicidal ideation: Nursing
Major depressive disorder
Major depressive disorder with seasonal pattern
Perinatal depression: Nursing
Bipolar and related disorders
Case study - Bipolar I disorder: Nursing
Mood disorders: Nursing
Mood stabilizers: Nursing pharmacology
Antidepressants - Tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) and monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs): Nursing pharmacology
Antidepressants - SSRIs and SNRIs: Nursing pharmacology
Anxiety disorders: Nursing process (ADPIE)
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD): Nursing
Case study - Generalized anxiety disorder: Nursing
Cluster A personality disorders
Cluster B personality disorders
Cluster C personality disorders
Anxiolytics and sedative-hypnotics: Nursing pharmacology
Delirium: Nursing
Schizophrenia: Nursing
Case study - Schizophrenia with paranoia: Nursing
Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD): Nursing process (ADPIE)
Case study - Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD): Nursing
Stimulant medications for attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD): Nursing pharmacology
Eating disorders: Nursing process (ADPIE)
Case study - Anorexia nervosa: Nursing
Substance use disorder - Alcohol and tobacco: Nursing
Substance use disorder - Medications and illicit drugs: Nursing
Case study - Substance use disorder (SUD): Nursing
Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD): Nursing
Case study - Borderline personality disorder: Nursing
Dementia: Nursing
Case study - Delirium: Nursing
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If you were asked to describe a friend’s personality, you might describe them as a creative type, or easy-going but nervous in groups.

Basically, you’re trying to summarize the personality traits that make them who they are—either how they think or how they act.

Sometimes these thought patterns or behaviors which make up a person’s personality can actually be harmful in the sense that they interfere with their day-to-day functioning in their personal life, at work, or in social settings.

If this were the case, we would say that the individual has a personality disorder.

The DSM-5 lists ten personality disorders that are split into three different “clusters”: A, B, and C.

These used to be under the umbrella of “Axis 2” but that way of organizing isn’t really used anymore.

Cluster C personality disorders include avoidant personality disorder, obsessive compulsive personality disorder, and dependent personality disorder.

As you can probably guess, they all have a genetic association with anxiety disorders.

Let’s start with avoidant personality disorder.

Individuals with this disorder tend to be shy, timid, and socially inhibited, with extremely low self-esteem, seeing themselves as incapable, inadequate, and undesirable.

These individuals often want close relationships with others, but rarely take social risks, and avoid social situations, which makes it hard for them to meet new people.

People with this disorder can be hypersensitive to rejection and negative feedback, becoming even more withdrawn when that happens.

There is overlap between avoidant personality disorders and social phobias, but one key difference is that social phobias tend to be focused on anxiety of specific situations like public speaking or dancing in public, while avoidant personality disorder is defined by an anxiety of social situations more generally.

Next we’ve got obsessive compulsive personality disorder (OCPD), which is where individuals are obsessed with orderliness, perfectionism, and having complete control, as well as rules, details, and schedules.

While OCPD might sound like a great set of attributes, people with this disorder can often be inflexible and easily stressed, as well as surprisingly inefficient because they spend so much extra time planning and worrying about tasks, rather than simply getting on with them.