Dialectical Behavior Therapy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 30
About This Presentation
Title:

Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Description:

Nine DSM Criteria the only diagnosis that includes self-harm as a criteria. ... (ANTITHESIS) and is preserved and fulfilled by it, leading to a reconciliation of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:141
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 31
Provided by: dmhMis
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Dialectical Behavior Therapy


1
Dialectical Behavior Therapy
  • Creating a Life Worth Living
  • May 17, 2007
  • Christy Hutton, PhD

2
What is BPD?
  • Nine DSM Criteriathe only diagnosis that
    includes self-harm as a criteria.
  • Historically considered as an excess of
    aggression disorder.
  • Evolved into a disorder about which treaters
    became hopeless, burned out.
  • Now viewed as an affective continuum disorder
    similar to bipolar with strong anxiety components.

3
Borderline Personality Disorderis common and
deadly
  • 11 of psychiatric outpatients 19 of
    inpatients meet DSM-IV criteria for BPD
  • 33 of personality-disordered outpatients meet
    criteria
  • 74 of BPD population is female
  • 70-75 have a history of at least one
    self-injurious act
  • Suicide rates for BPD are 9
  • Those with history of parasuicidal behavior have
    double the risk of completed suicide

4
Why should we use DBT?
  • Dramatically reduces suicide attempts and
    parasuicide behaviors over Treatment as Usual
    (TAU) or Treatment by Experts (TBE).
  • Decreases anger and anxiety related impulsive
    behaviors.
  • Reduces hopelessness.
  • Improves coping skills.

5
The DBT approach to treatment
  • Based on behavioral theory, cognitive theory, and
    mindfulness practice.
  • A stages of treatment model with hierarchies of
    treatment at each stage.
  • Problem solving
  • Behavioral Analysis
  • Insight Strategies/Cognitive Restructuring
  • Didactics
  • Contingency Management
  • Behavioral Rehearsal
  • Exposure therapy

6
Dialectics
  • The process of change whereby an idea or
    event (THESIS) generates and is transformed into
    its opposite (ANTITHESIS) and is preserved and
    fulfilled by it, leading to a reconciliation of
    opposites (SYNTHESIS).

7
Dialecticsin English
  • Helping clients find true balance in emotion,
    thoughts, and behavior/choices.
  • Teaching clients how to live in balance.
  • Modeling living in balance
  • BothAnd
  • Pushing for change.

8
Dialectical Strategies
9
Emotion Dysregulation
  • Emotions out of control
  • No steering wheel
  • Cant control behavior
  • Mood driven behavior

10
The client is doing the best she can
  • Did you choose to have these moods?

11
Biosocial Model
Biological Mood Sensitivity/Dysregulation Innate
sensitivity to stimuli or predisposition to mood
disorder (To a greater or lesser degree)
Learning Environment Ill-equipped to meet the
needs of the individual (physical, emotional,
intellectual) Expressiveness and displays or
needs are not tolerated, dismissed, trivialized
or criticized. Rational responses are highly
valued/ only highly reactive/disruptive requests
and responses are recognized.
12
BiologicalEmotional Vulnerability
  • High Emotional Sensitivity
  • Immediate reaction
  • Low threshold for emotional arousal
  • High Emotional Reactivity
  • Extreme reaction
  • Hard to think clearly
  • Slow Return to Baseline
  • Long-lasting reactions
  • Sensitized before next event

13
Resources
  • Money
  • Education
  • Patience
  • Support
  • Access to services
  • No mental illness
  • Coping Strategies

14
Behavioral PatternsDialectical Dilemmas
15
A Disorder of Dysregulation
  • Emotional Dysregulation rapidly shifting
    feelings and moods. Problems with anger.
  • Interpersonal Dysregulation chaotic
    relationships, fear of being left alone or
    abandoned.
  • Self Dysregulation fluctuating or absent sense
    of self. Sense of emptiness.
  • Cognitive Dysregulation dissociation, paranoid
    thinking, over personalization.
  • Behavioral Dysregulation self harm behaviors,
    impulsive behaviors

16
THE PROBLEM
AVOIDANCE OR ESCAPE
PROBLEM BEHAVIOR
EMOTION DYSREGULATION
CUE
TEMPORARY RELIEF
17
DBT INTERVENES
Teaches how to problem-solve/ control problem cues
AVOIDANCE OR ESCAPE
X
PROBLEM BEHAVIOR Teaches how to stop this
behavior
EMOTION DYSREGULATION Teaches how to tolerate
distress
Teaches how to avoid or distract without
problem behavior
CUE
X
Teaches how to change this association through
behavioral exposure or stimulus control
TEMPORARY RELIEF
Stopping problem behavior stops reinforcement
Teaches how to regulate emotions
18
Functions of Comprehensive DBT
  • 1. Enhance capabilities
  • (self-regulation)
  • 2. Improve motivation
  • (Cue exposure/response prevention/skillful
    response reinforcement)
  • 3. Assure generalization to the natural
    environment
  • 4. Structure the environment
  • 5. Enhance therapists capabilities and
    motivation to treat effectively

19
Levels of Disorder Stages of Treatment
  • Level 1 Severe Behavioral Dyscontrol
  • Stage 1 Behavioral Control
  • Level 2 Quiet Desperation
  • Stage 2 Non-Traumatic Emotional
  • Experiencing
  • Level 3 Problems in Living
  • Stage 3 Ordinary Happiness
    Unhappiness
  • Level 4 Incompleteness
  • Stage 4 Capacity for Joy

20
STAGE 1 Targets
  • Decrease
  • Life-threatening behaviors
  • Therapy-interfering behaviors
  • Quality-of-life interfering behaviors
  • Joblessness homelessness relationship chaos
    Axis I disorders environmental structuring
  • Increase Behavioral Skills
  • Mindfulness
  • Interpersonal Effectiveness
  • Emotion Regulation
  • Distress Tolerance
  • Self-Management

21
Goals of Skills Training
  • Behaviors to Increase
  • Mindfulness Skills
  • Interpersonal Skills
  • Emotion Regulation Skills
  • Distress Tolerance Skills
  • Behaviors to Decrease
  • Identity Confusion
  • Emptiness
  • Cognitive Dysregulation
  • Interpersonal Chaos
  • Fears of Abandonment
  • Labile Affect
  • Excessive Anger
  • Impulsive Behaviors
  • Suicide Threats

22
Tasks in Core Mindfulness
  • Increase sense of self and decrease emptiness
    through learning to observe and describe on-going
    experience
  • Increase control over thoughts/emotions by
    learning to suspend judgment and watch thoughts
    pass and emotions ebb and flow.
  • Increase spontaneity and personal decision
    making by learning to participate skillfully in
    the moment integrating emotion and reasoning
    ability

23
States of Mind
Wise Mind
From Mindfulness Handout I Taking Hold of Your
Mind
24
Tasks in Interpersonal Effectiveness
  • 1. Learn to say no and make requests
    effectively while maintaining self-respect and
    important relationships
  • 2. Learn how to balance over-commitment and
    involvement with undercommitment and isolation.
  • 3. Learn how to balance assertiveness and
    joining with others to increase interpersonal
    relationships and self-acceptance.

25
Tasks in Emotion Regulation
  • Decrease (or increase) physiological arousal
    associated with emotion
  • Re-orient attention
  • Inhibit mood dependent behavior
  • Experience emotions without escalating or
    blunting
  • Organize behavior in the service of external,
    non-mood-dependent goals

26
Tasks in Distress Tolerance
  • 1.Replace maladaptive coping that works in the
    moment with non-destructive in the moment coping
    devices.2. Learn to Accept on-going events and
    discomfort in order to reduce severe misery.

27
Stage II Decrease Quiet Desparation/ Increase
Emotional Experiencing
  • Orient to exposure treatment
  • Exposure to internal and external cues
  • Community/Home/In-vivo work
  • Completion of Outpatient Skills Group
  • Develop trust in client wise-mind

28
Stage III Decrease Problems in Living/ Increase
Ordinary Happiness and Unhappiness
  • Model, discuss, reinforce normal behaviors,
    life management skills
  • Implement long-term goals
  • Build stamina
  • Decrease individual sessions
  • Reduce advice-giving
  • Participate in Advanced Group

29
Stage IV Decrease Incompleteness/ Increase
Capacity for Joy
  • Increase community involvement
  • Focus on career, relationships and spirituality
  • Terminate treatment

30
Christy Hutton, PhD, LLC
  • DBT training (1 hour to 5 full days)
  • Consulting services for beginning and enhancing
    DBT programs and skills training
  • 2710 Forum Boulevard
  • Columbia, MO 65203
  • Phone 573-474-1292 Fax 573-474-1295
  • Cell 573-823-0858
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com