Title: Fromeside Dialectical Behaviour Therapy Programme
1Fromeside Dialectical Behaviour Therapy Programme
- Dr Michelle Chauhan
- Clinical Psychologist
- Fromeside
2Plan
- Overview of DBT
- Fromeside DBT Programme
3What is DBT?
- Developed for BPD in US by Linehan (1993)
- Cognitive-Behavioural approach
- Dialectics and Validation added
- Active skills-orientated therapy
- Collaborative
- Goal eliminate life-threatening behaviours
4Dialectical
- Describes poles and extreme positions
- Acknowledges the grain of truth in each position
- Having two opposing positions and working towards
middle (synthesis) to bring about change - Avoid getting stuck in extreme positions
- (Dialectical Dilemmas and resolutions are key to
team functioning).
5Why DBT for a forensic population?
- High incidence of PD (50-70)
- Evidence base for BPD (Linehan et al, 1991
Linehan et al, 1999) - Emerging evidence for DBT for ASPD (McCann et al,
2000 Evershed et al, 2003) - Treatment with a clear behavioural hierarchy
6Why DBT for a forensic population?
- Systematic treatment of life-threatening or
aggressive behaviours - Addresses staff burnout and behaviour that
interferes with conduct of effective treatment - Forensic patients more difficult to engage,
higher attrition rates, poorer outcomes
7The Fromeside DBT Team
- Dr Michelle Chauhan, Clinical Psychologist (and
Team Leader) - Gerrie Holloway, Consultant Clinical Psychologist
(and Clinical Supervisor) - Jeff Roche RMN
- Dr Meyrem Musa, Clinical Psychologist
- Dr Amy Watts, Clinical Psychologist
- Rebecca Knight, Occupational Therapist
- Weekly Team Consultation
8Process of DBT
- Assessment (2-3 sessions)
- Problems, goals, diagnostics
- Pre-Treatment (4-6 sessions)
- Commitment to treatment (agreements)
- Reduce drop-out
- Clarify goals
- Orient and expose to model
9Treatment - Individual
- Individual weekly therapy (12 months)
- Diary card
- Target hierarchy
- Behaviour solution analysis of life-threatening
and aggressive behaviour
10Treatment - Group
- Skills Training Group (12 months weekly)
- Acquisition and strengthening of skills
- Mindfulness
- Distress Tolerance
- Emotion regulation
- Interpersonal Effectiveness
- Add Crime Review for ASPD group?
11Stage 1 Treatment Behaviour Control
- Target Hierarchy
- Decrease suicidal, parasuicidal and violent
thoughts, behaviour, urges - Behaviours that interfere with therapy (TIBs)
- Quality of Life problems - Related to Axis I
disorders or risk issues - Increasing behavioural skills
12 - BPD (DSM-IV) at least 5 of following
1. A pattern of intense and unstable
interpersonal relationships 2. Frantic efforts
to avoid real or imagined abandonment (not
including self-harm) 3. Identity disturbance
4. Impulsivity which is potentially
self-damaging 5. Recurrent suicidal or
para-suicidal behaviour 6. Affective
instability 7. Chronic feelings of
emptiness 8. Inappropriate or uncontrollable
anger 9. Transient stress-related paranoid
ideation or severe dissociative symptoms
13ASPD (DSM-IV)
- A pervasive pattern of disregard for violation
of rights of others since age 15 years, as
indicated by 3 (or more) of the following - Failure to confirm to social norms with respect
to lawful behaviours as indicated by repeatedly
performing acts that are grounds for arrest. - Deceitfulness, Impulsivity or failure to plan
ahead, Irritability and aggressiveness, Reckless
disregard for safety of self or others,
Consistent irresponsibility, Lack of remorse - The individual is at least 18 years.
- There is evidence of Conduct Disorder onset
before 15 years of age. - The occurrence of antisocial behaviour is not
exclusively during the course of schizophrenia or
a manic episode.
14Outcomes
- 1 patient successfully completed treatment
- 2 patients currently in treatment
- 4 awaiting assessment
- Further modifications for predicted ASPD group?