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Dialectical Behavior Therapy: Clinical Outcomes and Essential Characteristics Marsha M. Linehan University of Washington Linehan, et al., 2001 Copyright.

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Presentation on theme: "Dialectical Behavior Therapy: Clinical Outcomes and Essential Characteristics Marsha M. Linehan University of Washington Linehan, et al., 2001 Copyright."— Presentation transcript:

1 Dialectical Behavior Therapy: Clinical Outcomes and Essential Characteristics Marsha M. Linehan University of Washington Linehan, et al., 2001 Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

2 DBT is a cognitive-behavioral therapy designed for the severe and chronic multi-diagnostic, difficult-to-treat patient with both Axis I and Axis II disorders

3 Borderline Personality Disorder (Re-organized)
Emotion Dysregulation Affective lability & Problems with anger Interpersonal Dysregulation Chaotic relationships & Fears of abandonment Self Dysregulation Identity disturbance/confused sense of self Sense of emptiness Behavioral Dysregulation Parasuicidal behavior & Impulsive behavior Cognitive Dysregulation Dissociative responses &/or paranoid ideation Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

4 Randomized Clinical Trials (6 with BPD)
DBT Superior to Comparison Treatments Reducing: Suicide attempts and self-injury Premature drop-out Inpatient/ER admissions and days Drug abuse Depression, hopelessness, anger Impulsiveness Increasing: Global adjustment Social adjustment (See Lieb, K., Zanarini, M., Linehan, M.M. and Bohus, M. Seminar Section: Borderline Personality Disorder. The Lancet 2004;364: ) Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

5 DBT grew out of an iterative attempt ( ) to apply behavioral principles and standard cognitive behavior therapy to highly suicidal patients with Borderline Personality Disorder Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

6 Workshop goals Learn the essential characteristics of DBT
Assess whether DBT (in whole or in part) may be useful in your practice Decide if you are interested in further training in DBT In leaving you will probably have more questions than answers—and may want to get further training. In 6 hours—we will not have time to get through much of what DBT is at all. However—I do want to teach you the basic features, help you evaluate if DBT might be useful for you, and decide if you are interested in reading the entire book and or getting further training. BEFORE NEXT SLIDE— Now a unique feature of DBT is that in large part—it treats the therapist. A central idea is that the therapist shifts his/her way of thinking in order to shift the patient’s frame. So, the therapist practices DBT skills as well. So—one way we typically start our DBT supervision meetings (consultation) is to do a brief practice of mindfulness skills. Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

7 Attempt to Reduce or Avoid
Model Attempt to Reduce or Avoid the Painful Emotion PROBLEM BEHAVIOR EMOTION DYSREGULATION CUE OR TRIGGER TEMPORARY RELIEF

8 Impaired Cognitive Processing Intense Effort to Control
Problem 1 !!AROUSAL!! SENSE OF OUT-OF-CONTROL FOCUS ON CHANGE Impaired Cognitive Processing + Intense Effort to Control

9 Shut Down, Withdrew, Quit or
The Client Shut Down, Withdrew, Quit or ATTACKED

10 The Problem Further !!AROUSAL!! FOCUS ON ACCEPTANCE INVALIDATION
SENSE OF OUT-OF-CONTROL INVALIDATION OF SUFFERING

11 Solution Was to Apply A Dialectical Approach Balancing
Acceptance Strategies Change Strategies

12 Attempt to Reduce or Avoid
Problem 2: Attempt to Reduce or Avoid the Painful Emotion Problem Behavior 1 EMOTION DYSREGULATION CUE OR TRIGGER Problem Behavior 2 Problem Behavior i TEMPORARY RELIEF

13 Percent Axis I Diagnoses: BPD Chronically Suicidal Patients
Diagnosis Lifetime Current Major depression 96.7% 75.0% Dysthymic disorder N/A 14.3% Substance abuse 15.2% 5.4% Substance dependence 56.5% 26.1% PTSD % 51.1% Social phobia % 16.3% Panic disorder % 40.2% OCD % 19.8% Eating disorder 41.3% 23.9% Linehan et al., 2004 APA presentation

14 LOW Distress Tolerance
Problem 2: Problem Behaviors 4,5…. LOW Distress Tolerance Problem Behavior 2 Problem Behavior 1 EMOTION DYSREGULATION Problem Behavior 2 CUE OR TRIGGER Problem Behavior 2 Problem Behavior i TEMPORARY RELIEF

15 Female Inner City Residential Treatment
Correlation between a measure of distress tolerance (PASAT) and BPD (BSL) Female Inner City Residential Treatment Seeking Drug Users < ½ SD below BPD patient mean Lejuez, Daughters, Wolf, Kosson, & Lynch.(under review).

16 Solution Was to Teach Two Sets of New Behaviors
Acceptance Skills Change Skills

17 Solution Was to Apply A Dialectical Approach Balancing
Acceptance Validation Change Problem Solving Dialectics

18 Definition of Dialectics:
“worldview… “debate…establishing truths on both sides rather than disproving one argument” Encarta World, English Dictionary, North American Edition

19 Dialectical World View
Holistic, connected, and in relationship Complex, oppositional, and in polarity Change is continual Change is transactional Identity is relational and in continuous change Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

20 BPD is a Systemic Emotion Regulation Disorder
BPD criterion behaviors function to regulate emotions or are a natural consequence of emotion dysregulation

21 Emotion Dysregulation
Emotional Vulnerability Inability to Modulate Emotions

22 BPD results from transaction of biological vulnerability with invalidation over time
Ai BPD

23 Invalidating Environment
Invalidates (punishes, ignores) behavior independent of the actual validity of the behavior Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

24 Characteristics of an Invalidating Environment
1. INDISCRIMINATELY REJECTS communication of private experiences and self-generated behaviors 2. PUNISHES emotional displays and INTERMITTENTLY REINFORCES emotional escalation 3. OVER-SIMPLIFIES ease of problem solving and meeting goals Invalidating Environment Teaches Individual to: 1. Actively self invalidate and search social environment cues on how to respond 2. Oscillate between emotional inhibition and extreme emotional styles 3. Form unrealistic goals and expectations Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

25 STEP 1 Treatment STRUCTURE the

26 FLEXIBLE COMPREHENSIVE PRINCIPLE-DRIVEN
STANDARD DBT is.. FLEXIBLE COMPREHENSIVE PRINCIPLE-DRIVEN Make teaching points on rule-governed treatment v. principle driven treatments. Protocols v. Principles. DBT having protocols and principles. Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

27 Standard DBT Modes Outpatient Individual Psychotherapy
Outpatient Group Skills Training Telephone Consultation Therapists’ Consultation Meeting Uncontrolled Ancillary Treatments Pharmacotherapy Acute-Inpatient Psychiatric Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

28 5 Functions of All Comprehensive Treatments
1. Enhance capabilities 2. Improve motivational factors 3. Assure generalization to natural environment Structure the environment Enhance therapist capabilities and motivation to treat effectively Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

29 Commitment and Agreement
Stages of Treatment Commitment and Agreement Pre-Treatment: Stage 1: Severe Behavioral Dyscontrol Behavioral Control Stage 2: Quiet Desperation Emotional Experiencing Stage 3: Problems in Living Ordinary Happiness /Unhappiness Stage 4: Incompleteness Capacity for Joy and Freedom

30 Stage 1 Primary Targets Dialectical Synthesis
Commitment & Agreement Pre-Treatment: Decrease Life-threatening behaviors Therapy-interfering behaviors Quality-of-life interfering behaviors Increase behavioral skills Mindfulness Distress Tolerance Interpersonal Effectiveness Emotion Regulation

31 Dialectical Synthesis - the “middle path” -
Dialectical Analyses Truth is sought through efforts to discover what is left out of current ways of ordering events Dialectical Lifestyle: Balanced Behavior Patterns Balanced actions Balanced emotions Balanced cognition

32 DBT Targets for Skills Training
Decrease behaviors likely to destroy therapy Increase skill acquisition/ strengthen skills Decrease treatment interfering behaviors Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

33 DBT Targets for Phone Calls
For the Individual Therapist DECREASE suicide crises behaviors INCREASE generalization of DBT behavioral skills DECREASE sense of conflict, alienation, distance with therapist Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

34 DBT Therapists OBSERVE Their Own Limits
Don't Panic !!!!!!!

35 STEP 2 Do Behavior Therapy

36 Basic Behavioral Paradigm
Cue Problem Behavior Consequences

37 Emotion Dysregulation
Basic DBT Paradigm Cue Emotion Dysregulation Problem Behavior Consequences

38 COGNITIVE MODIFICATION
DBT Problem Solving S T A N D R C B Behavioral Analysis Insight Solution Analysis Didactic Orienting Commitment SKILLS TRAINING CONTINGENCIES EXPOSURE COGNITIVE MODIFICATION

39 1st Figure out the problem: Conduct a Behavioral Analysis
Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

40 Analyze the chain of events moment-to-moment overtime
VULNERABILITY PROBLEM BEHAVIOR PROMPTING EVENT LINKS CONSEQUENCES

41 2nd Figure out what to do: Generate solutions and new behaviors
Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

42 Possible Solutions Solve the problem
Change emotional reaction to the problem Radically Accept and Tolerate the problem Stay miserable

43 3rd Address factors getting in the way of new behaviors:
Apply Contingencies Teach New Skills Break Maladaptive Associations Modify Cognitions

44 Contingency Management
Goal Strengthen Behavior Weaken Suppress Consequence -Add Reinforcer -Remove Aversive -Withhold Reinforcer -Maintain Aversive -Add Aversive -Remove Positive

45 Contingency Management Changes the Hierarchy of Behavior
Maladaptive Behavior Punish/ Extinguish Adaptive Behavior 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1 high REINFORCE low STRENGTH OF BEHAVIOR Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

46 Distress Tolerance Interpersonal Effectiveness
SKILLS TRAINING Mindfulness Distress Tolerance Interpersonal Effectiveness Emotion Regulation

47 DBT as ... Cue Exposure Response Prevention Opposite Action

48 4th Give needed information: Do Psychoeducation (DBT Didactic Strategies)
Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

49 5th Explain the rationale: Orienting to Treatment
Describe the general task Link to C’s goals (rationale) Link to specific expectations and behaviors Rehearse new expectations Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

50 6th Get a commitment: Strengthen it, get it again, strengthen it, get it again….
Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

51 Core Strategy PROBLEM SOLVING Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

52 STEP 3 add Validation

53 Validation Defined Synonyms
"The action of validating or making valid…a strengthening, reinforcement, confirming; an establishing or ratifying" as valid Synonyms To Confirm To Authenticate To Corroborate To Substantiate To Verify Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

54 Levels of Validation 1. Staying Awake: Unbiased listening and observing 2. Accurate reflection 3. Articulating the unverbalized emotions, thoughts, or behavior patterns 4. Validation in terms of past learning or biological dysfunction 5. Validation in terms of present context or normative functioning 6. Radical Genuineness Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

55 Acceptance Validation
Core Strategy Acceptance Validation Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

56 STEP 4 Apply Dialectics

57 Dialectics: Step by Step
Step 1: Adopt and model a dialectical world view Step 2: Balance treatment strategies and therapeutic positions. Step 3: When polarization occurs, work for a synthesis. Step 4: When one dialectical strategy doesn’t work, try another Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

58 1. Model a Dialectical World View
Teach biosocial theory of etiology. Development and maintenance of disorder is transactional. Disorder is systemic. Search for “what is left out.” Disorder occurs when focus is on part without reference to whole. Allow natural change. Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

59 2. Balance Treatment Strategies
Change Acceptance Core Problem Solving Irreverence Validation Team Consultation Reciprocity Environmental Intervention Consultation- to-the-Patient Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

60 3. When Polarization Occurs
Search for The Synthesis Invoke “WISE MIND”

61 4. When one dialectical strategy doesn’t work, try another
Magnify the tension between opposites Devil’s Advocate Extending Enter the paradox And versus But Making Lemonade out of lemons Develop Metaphors Stories Analogies

62 STEP 5 DBT as Practice

63 In DBT, The Therapist Acting from Wise Mind...
practices Observing (Just Notices) Describing (Puts Words On) Participating (Acts Intuitively from Wise Mind) and is Non-Judgmental (Neither Good nor Bad) One-Mindful (In-the-Moment) Effective (Focus on What Works) 50.20 Copyright by Marsha M. Linehan

64 Don't Panic !!!!!!! You can do this!


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