Abstract

Seventy-one seriously delinquent adolescents (40 male, 31 female) were evaluated by two of the authors (an interviewer and an observer) using the Social Adaptation and Interpersonal Relations sections of the DIB (Diagnostic Interview for Borderlines) in combination with the SADS (Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia). DIB scores and DSM-III diagnoses were assigned to each subject by the consensus of the two evaluators. Twenty-six subjects received a primary DSM-III diagnosis of borderline personality disorder. Nineteen (73%) of these subjects were also identified as borderline by the DIB. The DIB was generally successful in differentiating the DSM-III borderlines from subjects with other DSM-III diagnoses on DIB total, subscale and statement scores. Subjects with a DSM-III diagnosis of major affective disorder were frequently inappropriately categorized as borderline by the DIB, however, reasons for the difficulty of the DIB in distinguishing delinquent adolescents with borderline personalities from those with major affective disorder are discussed, comparisons with adult studies using the DIB are made and directions for future research are indicated.

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