# Integration of Gestalt Therapy with Evidence-Based Interventions for Borderline Personality Disorder—Theoretical Framework and Clinical Model

**Authors:** Enrico Moretto, Roberta Stanzione, Chiara Scognamiglio, Valeria Cioffi, Lucia Luciana Mosca, Francesco Marino, Ottavio Ragozzino, Enrica Tortora, Raffaele Sperandeo

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/brainsci15101109 · 2025-10-15

## TL;DR

This paper proposes a new therapy model for Borderline Personality Disorder that combines Gestalt therapy with evidence-based methods like DBT and Schema Therapy.

## Contribution

The novel contribution is a hybrid theoretical framework that integrates Gestalt therapy with DBT and Schema Therapy while preserving Gestalt’s core principles.

## Key findings

- The model introduces the concept of the 'Draft Self' as central to therapeutic work.
- It integrates mindfulness and grounding within Gestalt experiments.
- Activation techniques are proposed to address identity fragmentation in BPD.

## Abstract

Background/Objectives: Gestalt therapy traditionally opposes categorical diagnostic labelling due to its fundamental inconsistency with phenomenological and process-oriented ontology. However, this epistemological rigour can limit integration with structured evidence-based interventions for complex personality organizations such as Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD). Despite the evidence base for DBT and Schema Therapy in treating BPD, these approaches may inadvertently minimize the lived phenomenological experience and organismic wisdom central to recovery. Meanwhile, Gestalt therapy’s anti-diagnostic stance limits its integration with structured evidence-based protocols. This paper proposes a hybrid theoretical model that addresses this gap by integrating the clinical epistemology of Gestalt therapy with Linehan’s biosocial theory of Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT) and schema-focused interventions, while preserving the core principles of Gestalt. Methods: we present a model of theoretical integration that draws on Gestalt contact theory, the four modules of DBT (mindfulness, distress tolerance, emotional regulation, interpersonal effectiveness) and the experiential techniques of Schema Therapy. The integration focuses on the dialectic of acceptance and change, which mirrors Gestalt’s paradoxical theory of change. The proposed framework preserves the non-protocol dimension of Gestalt therapy while incorporating the pragmatic utility of DBT and Schema Therapy. Results: key conceptual contributions we propose include: (1) theorizing the “Draft Self” as the object and subject of therapeutic work, (2) integrating mindfulness and grounding as embodied processes within live Gestalt experiments, (3) activation techniques to explore the identity fragmentation endemic to BPD. Conclusions:his integration offers a coherent, embodied, and process-oriented framework for understanding and treating BPD that validates patients’ lived experience, mobilizes evidence-based interventions, and opens up meaningful intertheoretical dialogue.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Borderline Personality Disorder (MONDO:0001156)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** BPD (MESH:D001883), distress (MESH:D012128)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12562780/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12562780