ASSIGNMENT 3 2025
UNIQUE NO.
DUE DATE: AUGUST 2025
, Psychopathology
Diagnosing Borderline Personality Disorder: Challenges and Contextual
Considerations in South Africa
Abstract
Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is a severe mental health condition characterised
by pervasive patterns of instability in affect, self-image, and interpersonal relationships,
often accompanied by impulsivity and recurrent suicidal or self-harming behaviour.
Accurate diagnosis is complicated globally by symptom overlap with mood, trauma-
related, and substance-use disorders, high comorbidity, and clinician-level factors. In
South Africa, additional contextual realities — pervasive trauma exposure, constrained
mental health resources, cultural diversity in idioms of distress, and stigma — further
complicate diagnostic processes. This essay synthesises the international diagnostic
literature on BPD, explores challenges unique to the South African context, and
presents recommendations for clinicians and health services to improve diagnostic
accuracy and continuity of care. The paper argues for trauma-informed assessment,
routine screening in high-risk settings, culturally responsive formulation, and clinician
training to mitigate misdiagnosis and under-detection. Limitations in available South
African epidemiological data are acknowledged, and a call is made for locally grounded
research to refine diagnostic approaches and service models.
Introduction
Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) affects emotional regulation, interpersonal
functioning, and impulse control, and is associated with substantial distress, functional
impairment, and high utilisation of acute mental health services (American Psychiatric
Association [APA], 2013). Although population prevalence estimates vary, large
epidemiological studies place lifetime prevalence of BPD in the community roughly
between 0.5% and 3% (Grant et al., 2008; Zanarini et al., 2005). In clinical settings,