Antisocial Personality Therapists in New Brunswick
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Frequently Asked Questions About Antisocial Personality
What is antisocial personality disorder (ASPD)?
Antisocial personality disorder is characterized by a persistent pattern of disregard for and violation of the rights of others — including deceitfulness, impulsivity, irritability and aggressiveness, reckless disregard for safety, irresponsibility, and lack of remorse. It typically begins in childhood or adolescence (where it may be diagnosed as conduct disorder) and continues into adulthood. ASPD affects approximately 3% of the general population and is significantly more common in men and in criminal justice settings.
Is ASPD the same as psychopathy or sociopathy?
These terms are related but not identical. ASPD is a formal DSM-5 diagnosis based on observable behaviours. Psychopathy is a research construct that adds emotional features — particularly shallow affect, lack of empathy, and callous disregard for others — that ASPD does not require for diagnosis. Many people with ASPD do not have full psychopathic features. "Sociopathy" is not a clinical term but is sometimes used colloquially for patterns similar to ASPD believed to have primarily environmental origins.
Can people with ASPD benefit from therapy?
Therapy for ASPD is genuinely challenging, particularly because insight, remorse, and motivation to change are often limited. However, meaningful progress is possible when a person is motivated — often due to legal pressure, relationship consequences, or personal suffering. Schema therapy and Mentalization-Based Treatment (MBT) have some evidence for personality disorders including ASPD. The quality of the therapeutic alliance and the person's own motivation are strong predictors of any progress.
What if a family member has antisocial traits?
Living with or caring about someone with significant antisocial traits can be confusing, painful, and at times unsafe. Therapy for you as the family member — to process the relationship, understand the dynamics, set effective limits, and make informed decisions — is often more immediately accessible and impactful than any therapy the person themselves may receive. A therapist experienced in personality disorders can help you navigate this situation with clarity while protecting your own wellbeing.
How does ASPD relate to substance use and criminal behaviour?
ASPD has strong associations with substance use disorders and criminal justice involvement — the impulsivity, rule-breaking, and disregard for consequences that characterize ASPD increase risk across both domains. Integrated treatment that addresses ASPD alongside co-occurring substance use or mental health conditions tends to produce better outcomes than single-issue treatment. Programs combining CBT and motivational approaches have shown some effectiveness in reducing harmful behaviours over time.