38
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

Dialectical Behavior Therapy

  • Upload
    cheche

  • View
    67

  • Download
    2

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

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. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Paulette Aasen, Ph.D.Director of Psychology ServicesWest Central Human Service Center• Bismarck, ND • (701) 328-8888Badlands Human Service Center• Dickinson, ND• (701) 227-7500February 10, 2014

Page 2: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Overview of DBTDeveloped 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.”

Page 3: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Foundations of DBTDBT 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

Page 4: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

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)

Page 5: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Bio-Social ModelBiological Sensitivity

AND Invalidating Environment = Dsyregulation Disorder Symptoms

Invalidating

Environment

Biology

Invalidating

Environment

Invalidating

Environment

Biology

Biology

Page 6: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Bio-Social Model (cont.)High SensitivityHigh ReactivitySlow Return to BaselineOften “Transactional” with the

Environment

Page 7: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Slow Return to Baseline

Series1

0123456789

AverageDysregulatedThresholdEm

otio

ns

Page 8: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Dialectical ParadigmDialectics 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.”

Page 9: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Dialectical Paradigm

From DBT Self Help at http://www.dbtselfhelp.com

Page 10: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Dialectics: A Model for Change

Movement Over Time

Thesis

Synthesis

Antithesis

Page 11: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Primary Dialectic in DBT

Acceptance

Change

Page 12: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Dialectical DilemmasUnrelentin

g Crisis

SocialBiological

Emotional Vulnerabili

ty

Apparent Competen

ce

Active Passivity

Self-Invalidation

Inhibited Experienci

ng

Page 14: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Dialectical StrategiesBalance Treatment

StrategiesEnter the paradoxMetaphorDevil’s AdvocateExtendingWise Mind“Lemonade out of lemons”Allowing natural changeDialectical Assessment

Page 15: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Behaviorism Paradigm

From DBT Self Help at http://www.dbtselfhelp.com

Page 16: Dialectical Behavior Therapy
Page 17: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Behavior Therapy BasicsBehavioral 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

Page 18: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

DBT Assumptions about ClientsClients 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.

Page 19: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

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.

Page 20: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Assumptions About TherapyThe 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.

Page 21: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Hierarchy of TargetsIndividual Therapy

1. Life threatening behaviors2. Therapy interfering behaviors3. Quality of life interfering behaviors4. Increasing behavioral skills

Page 22: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Client AgreementClient and Therapist BOTH sign

the agreement to acknowledge what it is they are agreeing to in the therapy relationship.

Page 23: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Session StructureReview Diary CardAttention to Target HierarchyChain Analysis on highest

targeted behaviorWeave in Solution AnalysisContinue to move down hierarchy

until able to discuss skills related to current life situations or session time ends

Page 24: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Commitment StrategiesTherapist discusses PRO’s and CON’s of

commitment to changeUse 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

Page 25: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Commitment Strategies (cont.)

Therapist uses principles of SHAPING to elicit commitment

Therapist generates hope by CHEERLEADING

Therapist and client agree on HOMEWORK

Page 26: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Validation of ConsumerStay AwakeAccurate ReflectionArticulating unverbalized emotions,

thoughts, and behavior patternsValidation in terms of past learning

or biological dysfunctionValidation in terms of current

context or normative functioningRadical Genuineness

Page 27: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Self-Verification TheoryValidation = Self-VerificationInvalidation of Self-Construct

leads to AROUSAL!!! (Sense of out-of-control)

HIGH AROUSAL + OUT-OF-CONTROL leads to >>>>

Failure to process New Information =

NO NEW LEARNING!

Page 28: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Relationship StrategiesAccept 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

Page 29: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Be honest about limitsBe consistently firmCombine Soothing, Validating, &

Problem Solving with Observing LimitsWarm Engagement:

◦Limits on Warmth◦Coping with anger/rage at the consumer◦Warm engagement and touch in

psychotherapyGenuineness

Page 30: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

DBT Skills GroupScreening session1-year commitmentBoth client and therapist sign

agreementAgreement includes statements

regarding homework completion and attendance

Co-facilitators

Page 31: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Hierarchy of TargetsDBT Skills Group

1. Therapy destroying behavior2. Skills acquisition, strengthening,

and generalization3. Therapy interfering behaviors

Page 32: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Zen PracticeBe Mindful to the current momentSee reality as it is without delusionsAccept reality without judgment Focus on one’s own experiencing as

a means of understanding the worldLet go of attachments that obstruct

seeing and accepting reality as it isUse skillful meansFind the middle way

Page 33: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Mindfulness ParadigmMindfulness 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

Page 34: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

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-JudgmentPatienceBeginner’s Mind or Child’s MindTrustNon-StrivingAcceptanceLetting Go

Kabat-Zinn, 1990

Page 35: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

5 Stages of Accomplishment

1. Denial

2. Uncertainty

3. Resistance

4. Panic

I can’t do it!

Maybe I can do

it!

There’s no way I can do it!

AAAARGH!What if I can’t do

it?!

Page 36: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

5. Acceptance

CONGRATULATIONS!

ALL RIGHT!I DID IT!

LET’S PARTY!

Page 37: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

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.

Page 38: Dialectical Behavior Therapy

DBT AssociatesChristine Kvidera, MSW, LICW

7362 University Ave. NE, Suite 101

Fridley, Minnesota 55432Phone & Fax: (763) 503-3981www.dbtassociates.comEmail: [email protected]