1 / 32

Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT) JFKU

Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT) JFKU. Mark Purcell, PsyD & Claire Coyne, LMFT. Different Types of Emotions. Calm. Sad. Estatic. Anger. LOVE. Joy. Panic. Pain. Embarassed. Confused. Guilt. Worried. DBT Goals. RADICAL ACCEPTANCE.

Download Presentation

Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT) JFKU

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT)JFKU Mark Purcell, PsyD & Claire Coyne, LMFT

  2. Different Types of Emotions Calm Sad Estatic Anger LOVE Joy Panic Pain Embarassed Confused Guilt Worried

  3. DBT Goals

  4. RADICAL ACCEPTANCE • Grant me the serenity to ACCEPT the things I cannot change, • Courage to CHANGE the things I can, • And WISDOM to know the difference.

  5. DBT Program Overview

  6. Dialectics Finding Balance • Dialectics Involves integrating seemingly opposing views • Similar to Eastern Concepts of Non-Duality • Use the word “And” instead of “But”

  7. Biosocial Theory I am Stupid... You’re so stupid! There’s something wrong with me I don’t understand why you’re so upset I don’t deserve to live I wish you were never born Confusion about self; impulsivity; emotional instability; interpersonal problems

  8. Emotional Dysregulation Biological Vulnerability to Emotions (Sensitive Wiring) Low Emotional Modulation • High Sensitivity • Immediate reactions • Reactions with only a little provocation  • High Reactivity • Extreme reactions • High arousal makes thinking clearly difficult • Slow return to baseline • Long-lasting reactions • Higher sensitivity to next emotional event • Difficulties with changing one’s own emotions • Difficulties with paying attention (e.g., in class) when emotions are felt • Difficulty in stopping from acting right away when emotions are felt

  9. Consequences of invalidating Environment By not validating feelings, the environment does not teach the individual to: • Label feelings • Effectively regulate emotions • Trust feelings By making problem solving seem easier than it is, the environment does not teach the individual to: • Effectively tolerate stress • Form realistic goals and expectations When communication of anger or sadness is punished and/or when only intense anger or sadness are responded to, the environment teaches the individual to: • Vary between having no emotions and having extreme emotions.

  10. Types of Dysregulation • Emotional • Interpersonal • Self • Behavioral • Cognitive

  11. Dialectical Behavior Therapy

  12. Validation Validation communicates to another person that his/her feelings, thoughts, and actions make sense and are understandable to you in a particular situation. Validation ≠ Agreement  WHAT should we validate? • Feelings, thoughts, and behaviors in: • Ourselves • Other People WHY should we validate? • It improves relationships • Validation can show that: • We are listening • We understand • We are not being judgmental • We care about the relationship • Conflict is possible with decreased intensity and anger

  13. Levels of Validation

  14. Interaction of Emotions, Thoughts, & Behaviors

  15. Matching Skills with Level of Dysregulation EMOTIONAL DYSREGULATION

  16. Commitment Strategies • Selling it, evaluating pros and cons • Devil’s advocate • Foot-in-the-door technique • Freedom to choose in absence of alternatives • Shaping

  17. Orientation Strategies • Therapeutic Alliance • Connect problems to areas of dysregulation and skill development • Define problems as targets • Link long-term goals to targets • Introduce biosocial theory • Introduce tx format/characteristics • Introduce diary cards • Review agreements • Use commitment strategies

  18. Pre-Treatment Goals • Agreement on Goals • Commitment to change • Initial targets of treatment Agreement to Recommended Tx. Client agreements Therapist agreements Agreement to Therapist-Client Relationship

  19. Treatment Goals Level 1: Severe Behavioral Dyscontrol Level 2: Quiet Desperation Level 3: Problems in Living Level 4: Incompleteness

  20. Stage 1 Targets • Decrease • Life-threatening/high-risk behaviors • Therapy-interfering behaviors • Quality of life interfering behaviors • Increase behavioral skills • Mindfullness, distress tolerance, interpersonal effectiveness, emotional regulation

  21. Therapy-Interfering Behaviors Client • Non-compliance • Non-collaborative • Non-attending • Behaviors that interfere with other clients • Pushing therapists’ limits • Reduce therapist’s motivation to treat

  22. Therapy-Interfering Behavior Therapist • Extreme acceptance or change • Extreme flexibility to rigidity • Extreme nurturing or withholding • Extreme vulnerability or irreverence Disrespectful Behaviors

  23. Quality of Life Interfering Behaviors • Incapacitating DSM Disorder • High risk sexual behavior • Extreme financial difficulties • Criminal behaviors • Severe interpersonal dysfuntion • Unemployment, severe school problems • Physical health, dysfunctional behaviors • Severe housing difficulties

  24. Adol. Secondary Targets • Excessive leniency vs. authoritarian control • Normalizing pathological behaviors vs. pathologizing normative behaviors • Forcing autonomy vs. fostering dependence

  25. Diary Cards • Track and observe behaviors in real time • Structure Session • Spring board to Chain and Solution Analysis • Integration of Skills

  26. Diary Cards

  27. Chain Analysis vu VULNERABILIES PROMTING EVENTS PROBLEM BEHAVIOR CONSEQUENCES

  28. Solution Analysis • Identify goals, needs, desires • Generate solutions • Evaluate solutions • Choose a solution to implement • Troubleshoot solution

  29. Responding to Problems • Solve the problem • Change emotional reaction to problem • Tolerate/accept the problem • Stay miserable

  30. DBT Consultation Agreements • To accept a dialectical philosophy • To consult with patient on how to interact with other therapists • Consistency of therapists is not expected • Observe own limits, without judgment

  31. Consultation Agreements Con’t • Search for non-pejorative, empathic interpretation of client’s behavior • All therapists are fallible

  32. DBT Team Responsibilities • Plan and trouble shoot treatment • Monitoring adherence to DBT • Progress towards DBT competence • Consult to the therapist • Support to therapist and team members

More Related