Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD)

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Narcissistic personality disorder
People who have a need cavernous for appreciation, an overstated sense of their own significance, and a lack of compassion for others are categorized with a mental disorder known as the Narcissistic personality disorder (NPD). It has its roots from a myth in ancient Greek where Narcissus, a proud young man became so enamored when he saw his reflection on water for the first time and could not stop gazing at it as he eventually wasted to death at the water’s edge (Kernberg, & Yeomans, 2013). However, it has only been recognized as an illness within the last fifty years where the field of psychology took it as a subject of scientific interest. In 1911, Austrian Psychoanalyst published one of the earliest descriptions
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This causes problems in multiple areas of life such as family, work, and friendships where the person displays a longer term pattern of thoughts and behaviors. This individual may be disappointed and unhappy when they are not admired or given special favors that they believe they deserve (Schulze et al., 2013). The people around this person may start describing them as manipulative, cocky, and demanding as they are preoccupied with prestige, power, and vanity. They are boastful, selfish, and ignore others’ needs and feelings failing to see the damaging effects these behaviors are causing others and themselves. Some of other symptoms of this disorder include preoccupation with fantasies of unlimited success, expectations of being realized as superior, setting of unrealistic goals, unemotional, easily hurt and …show more content…
The treatment process on the long-term focuses on how the individual interacts with the therapist during therapy, teaching them ways to regulate their emotions, changing and examining grandiose and excessively thinking. They are taught more prosocial ways of interacting with others by correcting self-centered behaviors. Other remedial modalities used to attend to the disorder consist of couples, family, and group rehabilitation, as well as short-term objective, focused psychotherapy and cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT). Hospitalization is only advised as a temporary measure to allow adjustment of medication dosages or stabilization of environmental stressors. However, shorter hospital stays are best for patients with this condition. I think the government is doing enough to prevent this disorder because of the interventions in domestic violence, deterrence of child violence, and material mistreatment in families that help reduce its