Marsha Linehan has a section on this subject of how to manage such safety issues with cutters (and borderlines in general) in her book on her original Dialectical Behavioral Therapy approach. Her presentation in this book is, so far as I know, the most comprehensive discussion of the subject that can be found in one source. McGraw Hill publishes this book, and I think one may be able to earn continuing-education credits from McGraw Hill if one studies this book and answers their test questions. You may wish to do an internet search to find the McGraw Hill catalogue to find out more. I believe that there is absolutely nobody who has studied more thorougly this subject of how to manage patients with So rather than seek half-baked hit-and-misse gueses from persons at this forum, why not take full advantage of Marsha's hard work that she has done for the benfit of all clinicans on earth and begin to not only study her book and workbook on Dialectial Behavioral Therapy but also call or write to her at the U. of Washington in Seattle to ask her what other articles and books she might recommend to you on this important and serious patient-management subject of cutting. As I say, I don't think anyone knows more about this subject than Marsha does.
self-destructive impulsiveness, such as cutting, than Marsha Linehan.
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