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Dialectical Behavior Therapy. Paulette Aasen, Ph.D . Director of Psychology Services West Central Human Service Center Bismarck, ND (701) 328-8888 Badlands Human Service Center Dickinson, ND (701) 227-7500 February 10, 2014. Overview of DBT.
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Dialectical Behavior Therapy Paulette Aasen, Ph.D. Director of Psychology Services West Central Human Service Center Bismarck, ND (701) 328-8888 Badlands Human Service Center Dickinson, ND (701) 227-7500 February 10, 2014
Overview of DBT • Developed by Marsha Linehan, Ph.D., in 1993 as treatment for clients struggling with severe & persistent emotional, behavioral, & thought difficulties, especially those diagnosed with Borderline Personality Disorder. • Dr. Linehan recently shared that she struggles with Borderline Personality Disorder. • The Goal of DBT: “Create a life worth living.”
Foundations of DBT • DBT is a synthesis of three paradigms: • Dialectics • Behaviorism • Mindfulness • Purpose: • Reducing dysfunctional behaviors • Increasing skillful behaviors • Building a life worth living • Client needs validating environment in which s/he is taught to regulate emotions, deal with interpersonal conflicts, tolerate distress, and find balance. Swenson, Witterholt, & Bohus, 2007
Linehan Diagnosis forBorderline Personality Disorder • Emotion Dysregulation • Affective lability • Problems with anger • Interpersonal Dysregulation • Chaotic relationships • Fears of abandonment • Self Dysregulation • Identity disturbance – difficulties with sense of self • Sense of emptiness • Behavioral Dysregulation • Parasuicidal behavior • Impulsive behavior • Cognitive Dysregulation • Dissociation / paranoid ideation (Linehan, 1993)
Bio-Social Model Biological Sensitivity AND Invalidating Environment = Dsyregulation Disorder Symptoms Invalidating Environment Invalidating Environment Invalidating Environment Biology Biology Biology
Bio-Social Model (cont.) • High Sensitivity • High Reactivity • Slow Return to Baseline • Often “Transactional” with the Environment
Slow Return to Baseline Emotions
Dialectical Paradigm Dialectics is the theory that opposites can co-exist. • Hegel: “Process of change in which a concept or its realization passes over into and is preserved and fulfilled by its opposite.” • Bohr: “The Universe is so constructed that the opposite of a true statement is a false statement, but the opposite of a profound truth is usually another profound truth.”
Dialectical Paradigm From DBT Self Help at http://www.dbtselfhelp.com
Dialectics: A Model for Change Thesis Antithesis Synthesis Movement Over Time
Primary Dialectic in DBT Acceptance Change
Dialectical Dilemmas Emotional Vulnerability Active Passivity Unrelenting Crisis Biological Social Apparent Competence Inhibited Experiencing Self-Invalidation
Dialectical Strategies • Balance Treatment Strategies • Enter the paradox • Metaphor • Devil’s Advocate • Extending • Wise Mind • “Lemonade out of lemons” • Allowing natural change • Dialectical Assessment
Behaviorism Paradigm From DBT Self Help at http://www.dbtselfhelp.com
Behavior Therapy Basics • Behavioral Principles necessary to be effective • Behavior Therapy: a non-biological form of therapy that developed from learning theory. The purpose is to change maladaptive patterns of behavior. • Shaping: Divide a behavior to be learned into a series of steps. • DBT: Harm reduction model so shape clients toward that
DBT Assumptions about Clients • Clients are doing the best they can. • Clients want to improve. • Clients need to do better, try harder, and be more motivated to change. • Clients may not have caused all of their own problems, AND they need to solve them anyway.
Assumptions about Clients (cont.) • The lives of suicidal individuals with Borderline Personality Disorder are unbearable as they are currently being lived. • Clients must learn new behaviors in all relevant contexts. • Clients cannot fail in DBT.
Assumptions About Therapy • The most caring thing a therapist can do is help clients change in ways that bring them closer to their own ultimate goals. • Clarity, precision, and compassion are of utmost importance in conducting DBT. • The therapeutic relationship is a real relationship between equals.
Hierarchy of Targets • Individual Therapy • Life threatening behaviors • Therapy interfering behaviors • Quality of life interfering behaviors • Increasing behavioral skills
Client Agreement • Client and Therapist BOTH sign the agreement to acknowledge what it is they are agreeing to in the therapy relationship.
Session Structure • Review Diary Card • Attention to Target Hierarchy • Chain Analysis on highest targeted behavior • Weave in Solution Analysis • Continue to move down hierarchy until able to discuss skills related to current life situations or session time ends
Commitment Strategies • Therapist discusses PRO’s and CON’s of commitment to change • Use the DEVIL’S ADVOCATE technique to strengthen commitment and build sense of control • Highlight PRIOR COMMITMENTS consumer has made • Present consumer with CHOICE stressing the freedom to choose while presenting the consequences of choices clearly and directly
Commitment Strategies (cont.) • Therapist uses principles of SHAPING to elicit commitment • Therapist generates hope by CHEERLEADING • Therapist and client agree on HOMEWORK
Validation of Consumer • Stay Awake • Accurate Reflection • Articulating unverbalized emotions, thoughts, and behavior patterns • Validation in terms of past learning or biological dysfunction • Validation in terms of current context or normative functioning • Radical Genuineness
Self-Verification Theory • Validation = Self-Verification • Invalidation of Self-Construct leads to AROUSAL!!! (Sense of out-of-control) • HIGHAROUSAL+OUT-OF-CONTROL leads to >>>> • Failure to process New Information = • NO NEW LEARNING!
Relationship Strategies • Accept the relationship as it is in the current moment, use the relationship as therapy – YOU are the Key • Use problem solving on the relationship • Attend directly to generalization of behaviors learned in the relationship
Be honest about limits • Be consistently firm • Combine Soothing, Validating, & Problem Solving with Observing Limits • Warm Engagement: • Limits on Warmth • Coping with anger/rage at the consumer • Warm engagement and touch in psychotherapy • Genuineness
DBT Skills Group • Screening session • 1-year commitment • Both client and therapist sign agreement • Agreement includes statements regarding homework completion and attendance • Co-facilitators
Hierarchy of Targets • DBT Skills Group • Therapy destroying behavior • Skills acquisition, strengthening, and generalization • Therapy interfering behaviors
Zen Practice • Be Mindful to the current moment • See reality as it is without delusions • Accept reality without judgment • Focus on one’s own experiencing as a means of understanding the world • Let go of attachments that obstruct seeing and accepting reality as it is • Use skillful means • Find the middle way
Mindfulness Paradigm • Mindfulness is at the core of • Emotion Regulation (emotions, thoughts, and behaviors). • Distress Tolerance (skills used to help us cope and survive during a crisis, distracting or soothing activities). • Interpersonal Effectiveness (skills which help us to attend to relationships, balance priorities versus demands, balance the “wants” and the “shoulds,” and build a sense of mastery and self-respect. From DBT Self Help at http://www.dbtselfhelp.com
Mindfulness • “Paying attention on purpose, in the present moment, and nonjudgmentally to the unfolding of experiences moment by moment.” (Kabat-Zinn, 2003, p. 145). • Non-Judgment • Patience • Beginner’s Mind or Child’s Mind • Trust • Non-Striving • Acceptance • Letting Go Kabat-Zinn, 1990
5 Stages of Accomplishment I can’t do it! • Denial • Uncertainty • Resistance • Panic Maybe I can do it! There’s no way I can do it! AAAARGH! What if I can’t do it?!
5. Acceptance ALL RIGHT! I DID IT! LET’S PARTY! CONGRATULATIONS!
References • DBT Self-Help Website http://www.dbtselfhelp.com • Kabat-Zinn, J. (1990). Full Catastrophe Living: Using the Wisdom of Your Body and Mind to Face Stress, Pain, and Illness. New York: Delacorte. • Linehan, M. (1993). Cognitive-Behavioral Treatment of Borderline Personality Disorder. New York: Guilford. • Miller, A. L., Rathus, J. H., & Linehan, M. I. (2007). Dialectical Behavior Therapy for Suicidal Adolescents. New York: Guilford. • Swenson, C. R., Witterholt, S., & Bohus, M. (2007). Dialectical behavior therapy on inpatient units. In: L. Dimeff & K. Koerner (eds.). Dialectical Behavior Therapy in Clinical Practice. New York: Guilford.
DBT Associates • Christine Kvidera, MSW, LICW 7362 University Ave. NE, Suite 101 Fridley, Minnesota 55432 Phone & Fax: (763) 503-3981 www.dbtassociates.com Email: chrisco28@aol.com