Personality Disorders: Theoretical framework and formulation

United Kingdom · CPD points & talks · Psychologists

UK psychologists, strengthen your conceptual framework for working with personality disorders. This talk, informed by Kernberg, McWilliams, and Fonagy, offers psychoanalytic and developmental insights into personality structure, defences, and formulation, essential for effective client work and treatment planning.

This talk offers clinicians a comprehensive theoretical grounding for working effectively with clients who present with disturbances of personality. Drawing from key psychoanalytic perspectives, this session introduces foundational concepts for understanding, formulating, and treating personality disorders.

Using the work of renowned theorists such as Otto Kernberg, Nancy McWilliams, and Peter Fonagy, the presentation explores the structural and developmental components of personality, including what differentiates well-ordered from disordered self-organisation. Participants will gain insight into diagnostic considerations, levels of personality organisation, and the defensive strategies commonly observed in clinical presentations.

This lecture is ideal for psychologists seeking to strengthen their conceptual frameworks and enhance therapeutic formulation skills when working with complex personality dynamics

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this talk, participants will be able to:

Dialectical Behaviour Therapy : Distress tolerance
Emotionally dysregulated clients: Supporting Families - 5. Mindfulness and the brain
Emotionally dysregulated clients: Supporting Families - 4. Walking the middle path
DBT and CBT: Demystifying Differences
Structure as a Pathway to Connection: The Imago Dialogue as Relational Practice
What Really Builds Resilience? A Practical Overview of the "FUEL Your Resilience" Model
Structure as a Pathway to Connection: The Imago Dialogue as Relational Practice
Working with Death, Illness and Loss
Binge Eating: A clinical & psychoanalytic perspective
Also available for: South Africa · Australia · New Zealand · United States · Canada