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Correspondence |
South Devon Drug and Alcohol Service, 8 Morgan Avenue, Torquay TQ2 5RS; e-mail: langmaack{at}doctors.org.uk
Sir: There is indeed no English equivalent word to describe haltlose personalities (Cullivan, 1998). The word indicates a drifting, aimless and irresponsible lifestyle: a translation might be lacking a hold (on life or onto the self).
This personality has, in English-speaking countries, been described as "the unstable psychopath" (Slater & Roth, 1979). Schneider (1992) used the descriptor "Willenlose Psychopathen", indicating the absence of intent or rather a lack of will. People with chronic alcohol dependency have been said, not uncommonly, to have haltlose personality disorder.
Those with haltlose personality disorder have features of frontal lobe syndrome, sociopathic and histrionic personality traits.
References
CULLIVAN, R. (1998) Definition of
haltlose. Psychiatric Bulletin,
22, 58-59.
SCHNEIDER, K. (1992) Klinische Psychopathologie (14th edn). Stuttgart: Georg Thieme Verlag.
SLATER, E. & ROTH, M. (1979) Clinical Psychiatry (3rd edn). London: Baillière Tindall.
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