Haltlose Personality Disorder

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Haltlose personality disorder is an ICD-10 personality disorder in which affected individuals possess psychopathic traits built upon short-sighted selfishness and irresponsible hedonism, combined with an inability to anchor one's identity to a future or past. The symptoms of Haltlose share similarities with frontal lobe syndrome, sociopathic and histrionic personality traits, and are characterized by a lack of inhibition and "the immaturity of moral and volitional qualities...and the absence of positive ethical attitudes."

Described by Emil Kraepelin and Gustav Aschaffenburg in the early twentieth century, and further distinguished by Karl Jaspers, Eugen and Manfred Bleuler, it has been colloquially dubbed psychopathy with an "absence of intent or lack of will".

With other hyperthymics, Haltlose personalities were considered to make up "the main component of serious crime", and are studied as one of the strains of psychopathy relevant to criminology as they are "very easily involved in the criminal history" and may become aggressors or homicidal. Their psychopathy is difficult to identify as a shallow sense of conformity is always present. A 2020 characterization of mental illnesses noted of the Haltlose that "these people constantly need vigilant control, leadership, authoritarian mentor, encouragement and behavior correction" to avoid an idle lifestyle, involvement in antisocial groups, crime and substance abuse. The marked tendencies towards suggestibility are off-set by demonstrations of "abnormal rigidity and intransigence and firmness".

After discovering a guilty conscience due to some act or omission they have committed, "they then live under constant fear of the consequences of their action or inaction, fear of something bad that might strike them" in stark opposition to their apparent carelessness or hyperthymic temperament, which is itself frequently a subconscious reaction to overwhelming fear. They frequently withdraw from society. Given their tendency to "exaggerate, to embroider their narratives, to picture themselves in ideal situations, to invent stories", this fear then manifests as being "apt to blame others for their offences, frequently seeking to avoid responsibility for their actions". They do not hold themselves responsible for their failed life, instead identifying as an ill-treated martyr.

They were characterized as Dégénérés supérieurs, demonstrating normal or heightened intellect but degraded moral standards. Of the ten types of psychopaths defined by Schneider, only the Gemütlose (compassionless) and the Haltlose "had high levels of criminal behavior" without external influence, and thus made up the minority of psychopaths who are "virtually doomed to commit crimes" by virtue only of their own constitution. Frequently changing their determined goals, a haltlose psychopath is "constantly looking for an external hold, it doesn't really matter whether they join occult or fascist movements". The ability to moderate external influence was considered one of three characteristics necessary to form an overall personality, thus leaving Haltlose patients without a functional personality of their own. A study of those with haltlose personality disorder concludes "In all of those cases, the result was a continuous social decline that ended in asocial-parasitic existence or an antisocial-criminal life".

Haltlose has one of the most unfavorable prognoses of psychopathies. To exist safely, such a psychopath requires "a harsh lifestyle" and constant supervision.

Etymology and criticism

Illustration accompanying the description of Haltlose personality disorder in a Doctoral thesis at Sidi Mohamed Ben Abdellah University.

"Haltlos" is a German word that contextually refers to a floundering, aimless, irresponsible lifestyle, and the diagnosis is named "Haltlose" using the feminine variation on the word. They are commonly clinically termed an "unstable psychopath", which is differentiated from emotionally unstable personality disorder (an alternate name for borderline personality disorder). It was remarked in early studies that England, the United States and northern European countries did not use the same typology, not distinguishing between those psychopaths who were unstable and those who were "Unstable Psychopaths".

In 1998, it was remarked that there was not an easily-translated English variation to use for the diagnosis and it has been dubbed a part of "German-speaking psychiatry". The term "Haltlose" is more common in the study of psychiatry, while "Willenlose" is preferred in sociology. Some like Karl Birnbaum prefer the term "Haltlose", while others like Kurt Schneider prefer "Willenlos" shifting focus off their lack of self-control and opposed to the moralist tones of those like Birnbaum who had described the Haltlose as unable to grasp "important ideal values such as honor and morality, duty and responsibility, as well as material ones such as prosperity and health". In 1928, Eugen Kahn argued Willenlose was a misnomer, as the patients demonstrated plenty of "will" and simply lacked the ability to translate it into action.

Historically, researchers such as Schneider argued that instability is the symptom, whereas lack of volition is the underlying cause. It is not included in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, possibly due to a modern belief that the concept of volition is outdated and overshadowed by the concepts of motivation and arousal or drive.

In 1963, Karl Jaspers defined the term as "those who have no willpower at all, the drifters, simply echoing any influence that impinges on them". However, in 1976, the Government of Canada listed the alternate term "Unstable drifter" in a psychiatric criminology context as a problematic term for which they could not readily offer a French translation in accordance with their bilingualism laws. Similar issues have arisen trying to translate it to other languages, including Turkish. Ultimately the diagnosis was handicapped by the issues of translation, leading to criticism of "the impoverishment of psychiatric vocabulary" that led to declining research and use.

In the early 20th century, Aschaffenburg distanced himself from accusations that the diagnosis was intended to protect criminals from punishment, emphasizing instead that those with Haltlose personality disorder "generally cannot be exculpated".

Dr. Friedrich Stumpfl cautioned against what he saw as a trend of diagnosing haltlose personality disorder without investigating comorbidities that may be even more pronounced. In condemning the idea of personality disorders generally, Joachim-Ernst Meyer suggested in 1976 that Schneider's early description of the Haltlose personality disorder, as a lack of determination in aspects of life including parenting, could just as easily be described as an example of a neurosis rather than a psychopathy if studied only by its aetiology rather than its symptoms, and used it as an example of the nature versus nurture debate that surrounded all personality disorders. Critics ceded that the term "Haltlose" remained of value in educational and therapeutic contexts, while suggesting future collaboration between psychiatric research and sociologists would allow further definition.

Recently, it has been criticized as a "diagnosis of convenience [that] avoids all further deliberations about a psychopathic personality". Dr. DM Svrakic and Dr. M Divac-Jovanovic suggested the ICD-10 explanations of Haltlose, Immature and Psychoneurotic personality disorders appeared "dubious", and sociologist James Cosgrave found psychiatric use to represent a "fringe figure". A graduate student at Bochumer Stadt & Studierendenzeitung condemned the historical diagnosis from an LGBT perspective, opining that "incredibly oppressive language" had been used by the psychiatrists studying it such as "pathological femininity".

It may be that the evolution of test-batteries have minimized diagnoses of Haltlosen, differentiating it from some newer models in psychiatry.

Physiology

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Outburst of a Haltlose patient in German, expressing life is hardly worth living since as "war-horses" the Haltlosen suffer from society's efforts to tame them - and he will seek vengeace on the city.

Described as bearing a "pronounced heredity burden", the propensity for Haltlose has also been suggested to be passed only through the maternal genes. Only able to offer "primitive reactions" and "poor and immature judgement", they are noted to display an absolute lack of purpose in their lives "except for the simple biological need to continue living".

Gustav von Bergmann, a specialist in internal medicine rather than psychiatry, wrote in 1936 that Haltlose personality disorder was entirely biological rather than fostered through psychological experiences. Indeed, Dr. Hans Luxenburger proposed in 1939 that a toxin in the metabolism, when present with Haltlose personality disorder, might be responsible for asthenic difficulties such as shortness of breath, nausea, and cluster headaches. Dr. E.H. Hughes noted that two thirds of Huntington's disease patients had previously been diagnosed as Haltlose or Gemütlose psychopaths.

A study in 1949 of different psychopathies under examination by electroencephalography recordings showed that borderline personalities and haltlose personalities had increased levels of dysrhythmia, whereas other subtypes of psychopathy did not show variation. An individual in 1931 was noted as having initially improved but relapsed "because of encephalitis". As with other personality disorders, a 1923 article suggests it can also be acquired through encephalitis. In 2006, an Essex warehouse employee who suffered head injuries was awarded £3 million compensation on the basis it had caused him to develop Haltlose personality disorder, seeking out prostitutes and pornography which destroyed his marriage.

Mistakes cannot be fully avoided when placing children under care. even an experienced specialist often cannot distinguish between a blossoming hebephrenia and a Gemutlose or Haltlose personality disorder. Even with weeks of institutional observation, the certainty of our diagnostic aids can remain doubtful...under certain circumstances a doctor will advise medical care even at the risk of learning the patient cannot improve as a result of mental illness and will end up in a madhouse.

— Kurt Schneider

Dr. W. Blankenburg posited in 1968 that those with haltlose personality disorder exhibited less categorical orientation than those patients who were simply unstable. By 1962, lobotomy was being tested as a possible means to limit the chaotic thinking of the Haltlose personality.

Kraepelin, in noting "an increased risk of criminal behavior", estimated that 64% of men and 20% of women with Haltlose descended into alcoholism in the early twentieth century. The frequent intersection between HLPD and alcoholism means modern clinical researchers may use "haltlose" as a grouping when separating subjects by disposition. Research in 1915 noted an increased propensity for lavish spending, and overconsumption of coffee, tea and medication.

One 1954 study suggested female Haltlose patients may experience "manic excitement" during their menses. According to 1949 research, they have a higher rate of homosexuality, and 1939 evidence suggested that masturbation is more prevalent in Haltlose and Gemütlose (compassionless) psychopaths than in other disorders, and Haltlose erethics leave them "usually very sexually excited" and seeking out "atypical, irregular and unusual" debauchery whether in brothels, adultery or destroying marriages.

They demonstrate similarities to hysteroid dysphoria. In 1928, it was proposed that Fantasy prone personality was likely a subset of Haltlose personalities, suffering from maladaptive daydreaming and Absorption.

The eugenicist Verners Kraulis of the University of Latvia noted it was frequently comorbid with Histrionic personality disorder.

Symptoms

The most disturbing aspect of this patient's life was his complete selfish, hedonistic, irresponsible, drifting, and aimless lifestyle, along with a complete lack of hold on life or on his self. His life history led us to study the fascinating concept of Bleuler's haltlose personality disorder, which came naturally as a comorbid diagnosis.

— Dr. Gama Marques

According to 1968 research, haltlose personality disorder is frequently comorbid with other mental health diagnoses, and rarely appears isolated on its own. Hans Heinze focused on his belief that Haltlose ultimately stemmed from a sense of inferiority, while Kramer held there was a battling inferiority complex and superiority complex.

The Haltlose were said to have a dynamic instinctual drive to "cling" to others, to avoid a horrible loneliness they fear - but they will always represent a "lurking danger" because they were unable to actually maintain the necessary relationship and were in a class with the "forever abandoned". According to 1926 research, they view all interaction as a means of winning "indulgence from some people, help from other people".

One early study indicated that 7.5% of psychopaths were Haltlose, and Kraepelin estimated that his own practice determined fewer than 20% of psychopaths he saw were Haltlose. However more recent studies, after differentiating out newer diagnoses, have suggested that it may be fewer than 1% of psychopaths who are truly Haltlose.

Kraepelin quoted a patient's self-analysis as "a mish-mash of slavish debasement, anxiety, shame, terror, pettiness and fear of people". Krapelin noted generally of such patients that "her own weal and woe plays a huge role in her field of vision, with less interest or participation in the interests of others around them". Described in 1922 as both "moody" and "passive", they quickly switch from over-confidence in victory to sullen defiance.

Their emotional lability means they alternate between projecting an optimistic and competent image claiming they are "destined to do great things", and a more honest cynicism and depression. Research in 1925 indicates they display "great emotional irritability, which may result in violent loss of temper...and interpret every limitation as an undeserved insult" and have a "pronounced lust for argument". The symptoms are considered to worsen if patients are granted greater independence "in the home and in their work".

Like sociopathy, haltlose personality disorder causes an inability to learn from experience, and an inability to feel genuine remorse as a strong present-time orientation, lacking long-term goals, leaves them detached from the reality of their past - their self schema only encompasses the immediate present. Also described as "living in a random location and moment", this is commonly seen in Cluster B personality disorders such as Borderline Personality Disorder with which it is frequently comorbid, even though Haltlose is seen as either outside the traditional Cluster organization or a potential Cluster A personality disorder. A common pitfall in therapy is that they proved in 1917 to be "very superficial, they easily acquire knowledge but do not apply it in any way and soon forget it".

The essence of these people...playthings of external influences, allowing themselves to be carried away by events like a leaf in the wind! ...Impermanence is everything. In one hour, they are happy and excited with the whole world lying open for them in the splendor of the joy of life, but the next hour casts aside this optimism and the future now seems bleak, gray on gray...sympathies and antipathies quickly replace each other, what was worshipped yesterday is burned today, and despite all oaths of eternal loyalty, the best friend is transformed into the deeply-loathed enemy overnight."

— Dr. L. Scholz, Anomale Kinder, Berlin. 1919

Those with HLPD display "a number of endearing qualities, charming with an apparent emotional warmth, but also an enhanced suggestibility and a superficiality of affect", which can lead to unrealistic optimism. and "wandering through life without ever taking firm root". They are also noted as "absolutely indifferent to others...likes to live for [their] pleasure today, does not make plans not only for the future but even for tomorrow, studying and working are not for them". Persons with HLPD typically lack any deep knowledge, and "look for easy life and pleasures". They have been described as "conquerers with an appearance of emotional warmth".

Persons with HLPD were noted as struggling with hypochondria in 1907. They also struggle with alcoholism, and identify with antisocial personality disorder. In countries that do not use the ICD, the patient might be categorised as Histrionic PD, Borderline PD or Narcissistic PD, or in the manic phase of Bipolar Disorder.

Haltlosen were noted as being among those with a tendency to "disappear, wander and travel about, here, there and everywhere...[including those] known as the Orientkunden, [Middle Eastern] tramps. These are people who are attracted to the Orient on account of the ease with which they are able to live there without steady employment and the freedom from closer supervision of the Western civilization" in 1917. Kraepelin said they were "apt to take senseless journeys, perhaps even becoming vagabonds". Kraepelin argued only lifelong wanderlust was tied to Haltlose, whereas Kahn argued that the Haltlose often lost their wanderlust as they aged and preferred to settle into mediocrity. Some make their fortune, but the disappearance of less fortunate travelers is not mentioned by their families who considered them to have been burdensome.

To early twentieth-century researchers, they appeared amiable, well-spoken, self-confident and to be making strong efforts to improve their weaknesses, thus making a misleading first impression and endearing themselves to superiors. The lack of a sense of identity, or internal support, was thought to a lack of resistance to both external and internal impulses in 1927. Their "gradual deterioration in the swamp of neediness and immorality" still does not make a lasting impression on the patients. Thus Haltlose patients who recognize their shortcomings were thought to possibly be overwhelmed by a subconscious fear about participating in the world without restraints in a 1924 account. Similarly, researchers in the early twentieth-century believed that the inauthenticity of their projected self and superficiality of knowledge means that when "someone who is really superior to [them]", after a period of stiffly asserting themselves hoping to avoid submission, will ultimately and without explanation fully embrace the position of the other.

Pathological lying is closely linked to Haltlose personality disorder, with Arthur Kielholz noting "They lie like children...this activity always remains just a game which never satisfies them and leaves them with a guilty conscious because neither the super ego nor the Id get their due...Since they are offering such a daydream as a gift, they consider themselves entitled to extract some symbolic gift in return through fraud or theft". Adler maintained "Memory is usually poor and untrustworthy...often they seem to have no realization of the truth", while Homburger felt they held "no sense of objectivity, no need for truth or consistency".

According to early accounts, choices are made, often in mirroring others around them, but "do not leave even a passing imprint on the person's identity". Thus, they can "behave properly for a while under good leadership", and are not to be trusted in leadership positions themselves. Gannushkin noted they must be urged, scolded or encouraged "with a stick, as they say". They demonstrate poor mood control and "react quickly to immediate circumstances" since "mood variation can be extreme and fluctuate wildly", which led to the denotation "unstable psychopath".

They have been described as "cold-blooded" and "undisciplined, inclined to ignore the obligations assigned....always needs a strong leader who will direct and show what needs to be done", but must be differentiated from dependent personality disorder, as the two can appear similar, due to the artifice of the Haltlose patient, despite having starkly opposing foundations. Persons with Dependent Personality Disorder are defined by a tendency to embarrassment, and submissiveness which are not genuine facets of those with Haltlose even if they mimic such. Haltlose was thus deemed the "more troublesome" personality in 1955.

Published summaries

1915 graph of Haltlose personalities by age and gender

Otto Dornbluth offered the definition in his Clinical Dictionary, that the Haltlose were clinically "Psychopaths without perseverance, always derailing themselves despite good intentions".

In Kramer's lengthy analysis, he proposed that the Haltlose had a "hypersensitivity to sensory perceptions" which led them to deliberately spoil situations into which they actually wished to adapt and settle. This leads to "something quite contradictory in the self-assessment of the Haltlose psychopath, on the one hand they are full of feelings of insufficiency, but on the other hand they have a very high self-assessment...[but] show an astonishing lack of criticism for the inadequacy of their achievements". "They want to at least play-act the role they can't really be internally, they pretend to possess skills and achievements that they do not have...often they want to become actors...they seek out lesser social elements to impress by way of appearing exploited and victimized, and for that they enjoy the reputation that they claim."

Emil Kraepelin's initial belief was that the Haltlose were caught in a transition toward maturity but may ultimately emerge without the disorder. He also wrote that they were recognised as "possessing of lofty though unrealistic ambitions", active imaginations and would routinely "exaggerate, boast and fabricate".

Manfred Bleuler wrote "The Haltlosen are characterized by a lack of enduring emotional attachment and, thus, an abnormal tendency for the will to be influenced by various inner and outer stimuli".

[When] convinced of unseemly cases, of committing crimes, such persons [with haltlose personality disorder] transfer their guilt to others, without revealing any shame or embarrassment [and] are prone to pseudology; their lies are rather naive, poorly thought out, implausible, which absolutely does not bother them.
A group of hysterical psychopathic personalities is characterized

Roth and Slater remarked that "immediate wishes, affections or disgruntlements rule [them] completely, and [they are] indifferent about the future and never consider the past" noting they lack the traditional ability of insight but "are clever at concealing, both from themselves and others, this lack of real understanding by an exercise of verbal agility." and noted "it is tempermentally impossible for him to save, or to maintain any secure financial position...he is always on the brink of a disaster."

Uwe Henrik Peters detailed Haltlose Psychopaths in his psychiatric dictionary as "weak-willed, unreliable, unable to resist external influences, easily led astray, tending to sexual waywardness...if left alone, they cannot set their own goals, they have no inner compass."

The 2012 manual "Psychiatric Emergencies in Family Practice" noted these individuals as being "affectionless, egocentric and demanding...show[ing] no realistic ambition or foresight. Often restless, they do not profit from experience or punishment and are frequently impulsive, lacking the awareness of others' needs...appearances in this group can be highly deceptive for they are plausible, likeable and natural. Without a proper history, the doctor can easily be misled by distortions which occasionally amount to pathological lying" An "evasion of reality" is frequently present.

Childhood origins, and later role of family

"Whomever is abandoned in youth to the inexorable misery of existence, and at the same time is exposed to all manner of seductions, will find it very difficult to curb their constantly incited desires, and to instead force themselves through to the lofty vantage of moral self-assertion.

— Kraepelin speaking about the Haltlose, 1915

It has been proposed that haltlose personality disorder may arise from "traumatization through maternal indolence" or institutionalization in early life, although without definite conclusion. It may present in childhood simply as a hypomanic reaction to the loss of a parent or incest object. They often display a fear of abandonment that appeared in childhood, a common BPD symptom. Male Haltlose personalities may come out of families with a pampering, over-protective and domineering mother with a weak father. Homburger noted the "childhood and youth of the Haltlose are extraordinarily sad". It is possible, but rare, for Haltlose personalities to develop within healthy family structures.

Gerhardt Nissen referenced the possibility of intrauterine factors in the shaping of anti-social behaviors in Haltlose psychopaths, while noting the concept of psychopathy had been so weakened in modern psychopathology as to be indistinguishable from other conditions. Others have suggested there is a strong heredity correlation, as the parents often also display Haltlose personality disorder, especially the mother. Raising a haltlose child can, in some cases, destroy the family structure by forcing relatives to take opposing positions, provoking disagreement and creating an atmosphere of bitterness and dejection. They have been clinically described as disappointments to their families, and are unable to feel actual love for their parents and are indifferent to the hardships of relatives - since all relationships are seen only as potential means towards acquiring pleasure.

Care must be taken in making Haltlose diagnoses of children, since "the traits of instability of purpose, lack of forethought, suggestibility, egoism and superficiality of affect...are to some extent normal in childhood". Children with haltlose personality disorder demonstrate a marked milieu dependency, which may be a cause rather than effect of the Haltlose. It is of great importance that only children with Haltlose have peers and friends to surround themselves to try and learn associations and behaviors. They often become sexually active at a young age but delayed sexual maturity, and as adults retain a psychophysical infantilism. Regressive addictions amongst Haltlose psychopaths typically are infantile, and seek to replace the lost "dual union" arising from their parents' rejection, and later morph into a focus on subjects including vengeance or sado-masochism.

The age at which parents or professionals exhibited concern about psychopathy ranged; rarely even at a preschool age. Haltlose children confusingly tend to appear very strong-willed and ambitious, it is only as they age and the lack of perseverance becomes manifest that caretakers become puzzled by their "naughtiness" as it contradicts what had earlier appeared. This arises principally due to their rigid demands for short-term wishes being mistakenly interpreted as having a fixed purpose and persistence.Some patients later shown to be Haltlose, had shown neuropathic traits in childhood such as bedwetting and stuttering. They were also more likely to run away from their home, begin drinking before the socially acceptable age, and were afraid of punishment. Although struggling to make friends in young childhood, they find it easier as they age.

The Russian storybook character Dunno has been noted as an example of a child with Haltlose personality disorder.

A delinquent Austrian youth in 1966 was diagnosed with Haltlose personality disorder, and his case marked that "what he lacks above all is a model to which he would be prepared to submit, just as he lacks the concept of authority". Psychiatrists Lange, Kranz and Stumpfl were agreed that the Haltlose must be "given secure leadership" throughout life in order to remain "socially acceptable".

Kraepelin contended the disorder was "based on a biological predisposition" but also affected by factors such as childrearing practises, social position and state of the parental home. His analysis showed that 49% of diagnosed Haltlose had obvious parental issues such as alcoholism or personality disorders. A 1944 study of children produced by incest by Dr. Alfred Aschenbrenner found a high rate of Haltlose personality disorder, which he suggested might be explained as inherited from overly suggestive mothers. It is not believed to manifest often in children until they have aged. It is possible, although difficult, to diagnose from the age of five and presents one of the stronger psychiatric difficulties if present at such young age. It may be possible to prevent social failure "through welfare measures" akin to early intervention. Italian courts stressed mimicry of positive role models as a means to combat Haltlose youth who had fallen afoul of the law.

Schooling

Haltlose can cause educational difficulties, and if parents do not understand the peculiarities of their haltlose child, they may try to through good intentions to force the child into an educational regimen inappropriate for them, which then creates a feeling of isolation in the child which grows into a rebellious tendencies, "which turns out to be disastrous for further development". Students with Haltlose personalities may prefer the arts over the sciences, since the former does not require a consistent sense of truth and entails less disciplined study. Given their inability to anchor a self-schema and tendency to play-act roles, the theatre and film have great attraction and influence over them.

With proper leadership and controls from teachers, they are able to become "model pupils" in terms of behavior, although Schneider opined that it was worthless to educate an inability to learn from mistakes prevented actual education, and bemoaned that the late onset of anti-social behaviors kept the Haltlose in school when they might otherwise be removed. Walter Moos believed that Haltlose personality disorder and hyperthymia had shown itself to be contagious in rare cases, wherein classmates developed the same disorder from interaction with patients. Homburger argued for removing a Haltlose child from their family of origin as soon as the disorder was confirmed, to resettle in a rural educational centre.

Adolescence, young adulthood and efforts to intervene

[It] is not because the characteristics that cause the abnormal behavior in the late adolescence were not already present in childhood - but we do not yet ask the child to behave independently in life. By a child's nature, it is unstable to a certain extent, and even under normal circumstances will require the support of adults and protection from outside influences. Thus, only when the child reaches the age at which we demand a certain degree of independence and volitional decisions does the defect clearly emerge.

— Dr. Franz Kramer, 1927

Haltlose adolescents may use the internet to seek relief from unpleasant feelings through anonymous virtual relationships and similar activities.

When required to live independently, they "soon lose interest, become distracted and absent-minded, and commit gross errors and negligence". Ruth von der Leyen noted that "every care provider, teacher and doctor knows the Haltlose Psychopath from their practice", and remarked that caring for such a patient was made more difficult because of the need to lecture and intervene to enlist the psychopath's cooperation in short-term improvements, despite being aware the psychiatric reports have determined such efforts are ultimately useless but should be practised regardless.

The tendency to accumulate debts while seeking pleasure or escaping responsibility is often the attributed cause for their descent into crime, although Kramer noted those who displayed "extreme dexterity, sufficient talent for imagination, and a tendency towards dishonesty" were able to find alternative sources of income without necessarily becoming criminal, although warned that "again and again, their debts have to be paid until the parents no longer can, or want to, do this and leave them to their selves".

Gannushkin noted "Such people involuntarily evoke sympathy and a desire to help them, but the assistance rendered to them rarely lasts, so it is worth abandoning such people for a short while". The wasted good intentions resulted in the summary "probably the most important function of the psychiatrist when dealing with these patients is to protect their relatives and friends from ruining themselves in hopeless attempts at reclamation. With most of these patients a time comes when the relatives will be best advised...to allow the patient to go to prison, or otherwise suffer unsheltered the consequences of his deeds."

By contrast, others have advanced the "rather optimistic" belief that "a suitable [spouse]" or similar "strong-willed" relative could drastically improve the outcome of Haltlosen patients. This was echoed by Andrey Yevgenyevich Lichko who, while preferring the term "accentuation of character" to describe the psychopathy rather than "personality disorder", noted "if they fall into the hands of a person with a strong will, for example a wife or husband, they can they live quite happily...but the guardianship must be permanent." When they have been raised by families of origin that tolerated or fed their disorder, they are often confused when other people do not treat them similarly.

Individual case studies

Grave marker for Ernst Lossa

In 1902, a criminal complaint in Bern noted regarding a Haltlose-diagnosed offender that "the moral weakness of the accused appears in nearly all his life relationships, and he gives his character their character...[his] principles lack natural strength and stand so haphazardly that, like a house of cards, they will collapse at the first touch with the temptations of life". The commitment papers for an "Ida H.", arrested by Swiss authorities circa 1920, noted that her psychiatric assessment had determined she had Haltlose personality disorder and displayed "a strong fantasy, an inclination to hysteric symptoms and congenital feebleness".

In 1937, a German couple were declined a marriage certificate on the basis one proposed spouse "justif[ied] the conclusion that N. is in a condition of ethical and moral decline, due to a lack of healthy inhibitions...the court is therefore convinced that N is Haltlos and a criminal psychopath who is unable to conduct a marriage in the way in which it is desirable...it is to be feared that the inferior social characteristics that hold sway over [them] will be transmitted to offspring or that [they] would at the very least exert negative educational influences on [the children]".

Willy Roloff was a Pomeranian serial killer diagnosed with Haltlose personality disorder and a higher than average IQ, who was executed by guillotine at Plötzensee Prison in 1937 after his appeal to Adolf Hitler for a commutation was denied.

Wolfgang Scheler, the son of philosopher Max Scheler, was sent to Schneider at his father's request in 1923 and diagnosed as both a Haltlose and Gemütlose psychopath. After two decades of an unstable life that involved pimping among other crimes, he was sent to Sachsenhausen concentration camp in 1939; there are no further records of him.

Ernst Lossa was a Yenish youth deemed to have a Haltlose personality disorder at the age of 10 on account of his theft and treachery. Yenish people were believed to be particularly vulnerable to Haltlose personality disorder on account of inbreeding. He was later euthanized by the Nazis in 1944 at the Irsee sanatorium. His death was cited at the Doctors' trials in 1946.

A Haltlose man named Gottlieb K. was repeatedly convicted of crimes such as fraud in 1945, and when Swiss authorities sought to invoke Article 14 of the Criminal Code to house him in a sanatorium or the St. Johannsen Labor Institute, government council noted that his psychiatric report did not suggest medical faculties were needed for the purpose of curing him rather than any source of external control on his actions so he was sent to prison.

In 2011, a Swiss court case noted the defendant had been diagnosed with Haltlose personality disorder, comorbid with ADHD and Narcissistic personality disorder, and that he had been taking benzodiazepines while in freedom but medication was unnecessary once he was institutionalized. Two years later another Swiss case noted another Haltlose diagnosis, comorbid with Generalized Anxiety Disorder and Depression, which required "psychotropic drugs as well as supportive, connected and closely-controlled talk therapy".

In 2017, a Portuguese man with schizoaffective disorder and haltlose personality disorder, and with over 85 hospitalizations over his lifetime, underwent pharmacogenetic testing to determine a way to alleviate his symptoms. Following the results of this testing, his medication regime was accordingly altered. He achieved total remission of symptoms within four weeks.

Criminology

[The Unstable Psychopath] will distinguish [them]self by the glibness and insincerity of [their] protestations...[they] blame [them]self not at all and only hope to be extracted from [their] difficulties in order to continue as before on much the same path. However superficial their affects, personalities of this type often show an apparent warmth...permit[ting] them to impose on their friends and relatives to an almost unbelievable extent.

— Roth and Slater

While some Haltlose have risen to the level of dangerous offenders multiple times over, it is more frequent that they attract attention early from their "vagabond" nature.

G.E. Buda released a study of 72 convicts with haltlose personality disorder, debilitation and psychosis to study their mental degeneration. Heinrich Schulte BVO, a wartime medical judge and consulting psychiatrist for the military, continued advocating for the sterilization of Haltlose and other "Schwachsinnigen" after the war's end. In 1979, the Neue Anthropologie publication referred to a need to sterilize those like alcoholics, "who are often Haltlose psychopaths", from bearing children, to reduce crime.

Although Kraepelin believed those with Haltlose personality disorder represented the antithesis of morality, there is not necessarily a tendency towards deliberate amorality among the demographic despite its frequent criminal violations since they may lack the ability to premeditate. But their demonstrated lack of self-control is "especially manifested in the sphere of morality".

In 1935, it was estimated that 58% of recidivist criminals were diagnosed with Haltlose personality disorder, higher than any other personality disorder. More recently, Haltlose and Histrionic were the most common personality disorders found in female juvenile delinquents by forensic psychologists in Russia in the year 2000.

Domestic violence, incest and molestation of children

"[Patients resembling Haltlose] as a rule show little insight into the peculiarities of their conduct. They do not understand how they could have done these things, or they blame their relatives, neighbors and so forth".
-Dr. Herman Morris Adler, 1917

Although they enter relationships easily, Andrey Yevgenyevich Lichko contends they are not capable of actual loyalty or selfless love, and sex is treated as a form of entertainment rather than intimacy. They are therefore described as acting as "family tyrants". Their "tendency towards primitive reactions of an explosive nature", means they commonly perpetrate domestic violence including beatings, death threats, and smashing household objects.

Although they may not qualify as "true" pedophiles, Haltlose personalities demonstrate an increased risk of sexually molesting children, since other potential victims would require the realization of greater planning, but children are suggestible and easily overwhelmed.

A 1967 German study had suggested over 90% of adult-child incest offenders were diagnosed with Haltlose Personality Disorder. They are also noted for preferring sex in the presence of their children. Female patients may also live vicariously through encouraging and directing the sexual lives of their daughters.

Drunk driving, hit-and-run

Haltlose personalities are drawn towards dangerous driving habits "as a source of almost hedonist pleasure". In 1949 the Automobil Revue proposed that additional tests should be necessary for Haltlose personalities to obtain a driver's license. They have been known to steal cars to joyride at high speeds if they are not otherwise able to find satisfy their urge.

The American Journal of Psychiatry published a study of hit and run drivers in 1941, which showed 40% of drivers who fled the scene of a traffic accident tested positive for haltlose personality disorder. This was consistent with the earlier finding that Haltlose Personalities were among the most likely to attempt to flee if caught in commission of any crime.

Suicidality and murder-suicide

Research in the early twentieth century on suicidality among the Haltlose indicated several things: they chafe at the notion of any religion as it introduces unwanted inhibitions, especially against parasuicidal demonstrations; women Haltlose most frequently indicated suicidality was based upon fear of punishment or reproach, as well as the "excitement" of being institutionalized; and although frequently planning or attempting suicide, including through suicide pacts or murder suicide, Haltlose typically do not succeed since they lacked courage and were easily distracted.

Institutionalization

Haltlose patients respond very well to institutionalization where their influences can be controlled, becoming "model inmates" of sanitariums even within hours of first arriving despite a chaotic life outside of the regimen, "but if you leave them, through good intentions, to their own devices - they don't last long before collapsing their current state and being seduced back onto the wrong track". Kraepelin quoted a patient who noted "Though imprisonment used to seem gruesome to me, if arrested in the future it will become an oasis in my unstable desert". Schneider recommended warning them "through punishing them" as it was the only control on their action. Bleuler said the court system needed to understand such persons were in "urgent need of inhibitions".

Pyotr Gannushkin noted they joined military service due to peer pressure but given the lack of alcohol and stern, hard work required of them were able to function without their normal impairment. A 1942 study of the Wehrmacht found that only Haltlose and Schizoid were not measurable among soldiers despite their presence in the civilian population. A 1976 Soviet naval study came to similar conclusions.

Roth and Slater concluded "the treatment of such a personality is almost hopeless under the present ordering of society. Any treatment would...present