Title: The Shaping Game: integrating DBT, ACT
1The Shaping Game integrating DBT, ACT FAP
- SANDRA GEORGESCU, PSY.D.
- Paul Holmes Psy.D.
2- 1st - an apology
- Then, some compliments
3All boxes everywhere
- Classifying client presentation based on
categories in the DSM is .. - Classifying different treatment packages based on
developer/lab is. - Yet most of us see folks whose presentation
doesnt neatly fit into the criteria AND use
interventions that are more or less consistent
with each package
4This talk
- Is about the integration of behavioral
interventions across DBT, FAP ACT to - Meet client needs where they are at
- Provide ongoing care shaping behavior over time
- Stimulate thinking outside the package box (but
within the theoretical community)
5Some assumptions.
- If you are here, you have known difficult,
multi-problem clients and have struggled - Are at least somewhat familiar with all three
treatment packages - Have struggled (or are just curious about how) to
integrate techniques - Are friendly to the ACBS mission and
functional/contextual approach
6 some behaviors/solutions are louder or
more disturbing than others..
7Quick
- Notice and jot down a few reactions.
- What comes to mind?
8This is Jeanne shes in distress
9Do you know this person?
10How Todd spends his nights
11From an FC perspective
- Different strokes for different folks
- Drinking, binging, cutting, crying, panic
- Sexing, dissociating, changing the subject,
- Violence, inactivity/passivity, over-activity,
- Work-a-holism, intellectualization, burning,
- Fighting, impression management, blaming,
- Ruminating, worrying..
- Are functionally equivalent, yet our contexts
require different levels of intervention
12Strosahl (2004) says
- Behavior differs in degree not in kind!
- Distinctive features
- Behaviors are pervasive
- Responses gain habit strength
- Behaviors are resistant
- Self-defeating
- the crisising takes on a life of its own.
13Distress
- In medicine an aversive state in which an
animal is unable to adapt completely to stressors
and their resulting stress and shows maladaptive
behaviors Institute for Laboratory Animal
Research (1992). Recognition and alleviation of
pain and distress in laboratory animals - Psychologically situationally evoked intense
emotions, which usually scare us and prompt us
into action to terminate it - Holmes Georgescu (in preparation). Acceptance
Based DBT. - We all experience this some of the time (e.g.
panic)
14 then there are folks
- Who handle distress quite well
- Who handle distress ok
- And who seem to develop patterns of chronic
distress. - Or seem to experience distress constantly, become
preoccupied with being distressed and fail to
ever address the source - So that they are constantly reacting to their
reactions
15Chronic Distress
- What is it?
- In medicine
- Use of the term is associated with heart failure
put forth by Dr. Denollet in the Netherlands - Has been linked with type D personality (not a
mental illness) - Defined by 2 emotional states
- negative affectivity (worry, irritability, gloom)
- social inhibition (reticence and a lack of
self-assurance)
16Behaviorists take
- On Chronic Distress
- Ongoing preoccupation with distress which we have
evaluated as intolerable and prompts us to work
harder, faster, in more drastic ways to control,
reduce or eliminate the intolerable - Evaluative reaction to reactions
- Emotion-phobia - much like panic disorder but
overly vigilant to ones emotions
17A frequent occurrence
Hpersensitivity to emotions!
Trigger
In about 2 minutes!
Intense emotion
Judgment about emotion
Urges to self injure
Fear panic re urges
Action
18Case example
- 40 year old white female with a history of sexual
abuse, rejection, isolation, crisising behavior - Has had multiple hospitalizations residential
care for cutting and suicidal gestures - She comes to you for outpatient treatment to work
on trauma from sexual abuse
19Theories applied
- Emotional Dysregulation v
- Heightened sensitivity to emotions
- Increased intensity
- Slow return to baseline
- Fusion Experiential Avoidance v
- Interpersonally reinforced self-injury/crisis
behavior v
20How our treatments see it.
- DBT emotional dysregulation
- pain acceptance pain
- pain non-acceptance suffering
- Target skill deficit
- ACT experiential avoidance
- dirty vs clean pain
- Target functional class
- FAP interpersonally reinforced over
time/people Target CRBs
21Treatment Request
- I want to work on my trauma and sexual abuse
history so I can stop feeling this way
22Using Control Flexibly
- Depending on the consequences of target
behaviors, aim for control in the service of
eventual flexibility - Start with where the client is.
- Its a shaping game loud behaviors may require
to be brought under control so that they can be
shaped flexibility - Commitment, skill coaching and accountability
- Sometimes offering fewer options is the effective
thing to do
23What Tx Packages Offer
- DBT - based on skills deficit model targets
emotional dysregulation - Requires assumes commitment to skills use
throughout - Provides hierarchy
- Self-injurious, other injurious
- Therapy interfering behavior
- Quality of life interfering behavior
- Skills generalization
24Packages Offer contd
- ACT - based on RFT
- targets experiential avoidance as functional
class - Assumes choice throughout
- FAP - based on behavioral principles
- Provides framework for targeting in session
moment to moment behaviors - Prioritization is functionally based
25Common ingredients
- All involve acceptance defusion (implicitly or
explicitly) - All are functional/ contextually based
(functional analysis as home base) - All prioritize treatment targets
- All use the therapeutic relationship
- All provide a context for life-style change
- All target behavioral/psychological flexibility
in the long run
26Building up the straw man
27And exposing her to choice
- The louder more pervasive the presenting
behavior (e.g. the stronger the reaction it
elicits across environments), the more likely the
need for shaping of new/alternate behaviors
(skills) that are more functional - Commitment, coaching accountability
28Mapping Behavioral Processes
Start here!
DBT Mindfulness/FAP
DBT Commitment
here!
DBT Commitment/ Skills Training
29Arbitrary lines in the sand
- Self/other destructive
- Relationship damage
F A P
Values
__________________________________________________
___
time
Commitment
Choice
pliance
augmenting
tracking
Stage I DBT
ACT (Stage II DBT)
threshold
30Acceptance Based DBT Stage I
- Replaced cognitive restructuring
- Mindfulness/defusion
- Willingness
- Functional assessment
- Introduced Values
- During commitment conversation
- In Emotion Regulation
- Renamed skill areas
- Living in the present
- Living with Distress
- Living with Emotions
- Living with Others
31ACT as stage II DBT
- Slow progression from committing to choose
(skills) to choosing to commit - Armed with skills ( present moment
awareness), shift from working on the ones
problematic solution to working on the problem - Greater interpersonal risks
- Trust, Love Companionship (CBR2)
- Increased psychological ( behavioral)
flexibility
32Practically Speaking
- Flexible therapeutic dance
- Commitment (or not) by choice for some, perhaps
not all behaviors - Articulating values across life domains
- Facing past demons in the present with the safety
of a new behavioral repertoire - Choice in mindfulness experiential exercises
living a vital life
33Successive approximations
- Required structured mindfulness exercises
- Attention control
Attention
- Practice like one would a fire drill - over
over - With time. A choice, based on utility
- more experiential exercises (eyes on)
34Successive approximations
- Invalidation, self-invalidation, reactivity to
ones own experience -
- With time work
- Validation, self-validation, mindfulness of
experience, action - Other validation relationship flexibility
35Successive approximations
- Self under public control - I am who you say I
am - self-as content - Im wrong.
- With practice self-as-process via mindfulness,
behavior chains - Self under private control
- I though X
- I felt X
- I did X
- I could have used X skill
- ACT as Stage II DBT self-as context
36I still use
- A hierarchy
- Self-injurious, other injurious
- Therapy interfering behavior
- Limits of the therapist (my CRB1)
- Quality of life interfering behavior
- Committed Action
37Now for some practice!
- Pick a client who struggles LOUDLY!
- Identify target behaviors for Stage I (DBT)
- Prioritize using DBTs hierarchy
- Outline a commitment talk
- Outline CRB1 CRB2 that you will target
- Prepare transition Imagine its a year later and
that the loudest behaviors have ? - What choices would you offer them?
- What commitments would you still hold them to?
- Outline CRB1 CRB2 (are they different?)
38Role play!
- 1st
- Role-play the commitment conversation when they
enter treatment what will you tell them? - Then,
- Role play the initial ACT (as Stage II) session
what choices will you giveoffer them? - When/how will you integrate the DBT skills
previously learned? - Dont forget the FAP
- How are the CRB1 CRB2 different across time?
39My Client
- Committed to building a life worth living
before working on trauma - Targeted self-injury, in session hostility
skill use (esp. overuse of telephone
consultation) - Increased behavioral activation (job, living
situation friendships) - Choosing to commit at every step
- Targeted experiential avoidance more broadly ACT
for trauma