Manipulative and Toxic Silence in a Relationship: How to Recognize It and What to Do
Serena Borroni
Biography
Professor Serena Borroni is a clinical psychologist at the IRCCS San Raffaele Turro Hospital and the Istituto di Cura Città di Pavia.
She obtained her degree in Clinical and Community Psychology (VO) from the Vita-Salute San Raffaele University in 2002.
She later specialized in Clinical Psychology at the same university in 2007.
She is an Associate Professor of Clinical Psychology at the Faculty of Psychology, Vita-Salute San Raffaele University.
She serves as a Consultant Psychologist and Psychotherapist at OSR Turro and is the coordinator of psychologists in Occupational Medicine at San Raffaele Resnati.
Since 2007, she has consistently worked as a consultant psychodiagnostician at the Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy Service of IRCCS San Raffaele Turro in Milan.
Her diagnostic work focuses on the assessment of functional and dysfunctional aspects of personality and on the assessment of personality issues related to the progression of other mental disorders (e.g., post-traumatic stress disorder). She also conducts initial consultations at one of the screening clinics of the Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy Service.
Since 2007, she has consistently worked as an individual psychotherapist at the Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy Service of IRCCS San Raffaele Turro in Milan.
Specifically, her therapeutic work involves individual interventions inspired by mentalization for antagonistic personalities and bona fide individual interventions for personality-related issues.
Her research primarily focuses on the psychopathology of personality, with particular emphasis on antagonistic personalities and their connections with adaptive personality components, as well as on stress syndromes and risk behaviors in adolescence.
She is the author of 95 scientific publications in national and international journals.