Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for People with Brain Injury
Barbara A. Wilson, Jill Winegardner, Caroline M. van Heugten, Tamara Ownsworth in Neuropsychological Rehabilitation, 2017
MBCT (Teasdale et al., 2000) incorporates specific techniques that serve to disrupt vulnerability to a depressogenic ruminative response by altering the relationship one has with mental content rather than changing it. Dialectical Behaviour Therapy also emphasises validation and tolerance of emotional experience and skill development for adaptive personal and interpersonal functioning (Shearin and Linehan, 1994). Depending on the presenting problems or goals of intervention, evidence from large reviews suggests approaches drawn from across traditional (e.g. Butler et al., 2006) and third wave (A-Tiak et al., 2015) approaches may be effective.
DSM 5 SUD Criterion 9 Use in Spite of Consequences
Joan Ifland, Marianne T. Marcus, Harry G. Preuss in Processed Food Addiction: Foundations, Assessment, and Recovery, 2017
Similarly, counseling and therapy for the resolution of abuse and trauma may be indicated. Cognitive behavioral therapy and dialectical behavior therapy have been shown to be effective in supporting behavior change (Schwartz et al. 2015; Montesi et al. 2016). Family therapy may be helpful to families where children have become addicted to processed foods (Altman and Wilfley 2015). In all cases, practitioners will need to research referrals to ascertain that the health professional is comfortable with the concepts of abstinence from processed foods that PFA recovery entails.
Treating Chronic Pain in Personality-Disordered Patients
Andrea Kohn Maikovich-Fong in Handbook of Psychosocial Interventions for Chronic Pain, 2019
Several related but distinct treatment approaches have been validated for use within this unique population (Table 17.1). No singular approach contains the entire spectrum of interventions needed to address these patients’ complex presentations. Although the literature deems all of these approaches to be effective (and not differing substantially in terms of outcome), dialectical behavioral therapy offers advantages for treating suicidal and self-injurious patients (Beatson & Rao, 2014; Livesley et al., 2015).
Review of the clinical approach to the treatment of disruptive mood dysregulation disorder
Published in International Review of Psychiatry, 2020
Brian Hendrickson, Mahlet Girma, Leslie Miller
Dialectical Behaviour Therapy for Adolescents is an empirically validated intervention designed to treat emotion dysregulation, suicidal thoughts and behaviours and non-suicidal self-injury (Melhum et al., 2014; Rathus & Miller, 2002). DBT incorporates mindfulness, distress tolerance, emotion regulation and interpersonal effectiveness components. DBT was adapted for preadolescent children (DBT-C) and utilized in a pilot study to determine the preliminary efficacy and feasibility of DBT-C for youth with DMDD. Forty-three children aged 7–12 years old were assigned to receive DBT-C or treatment as usual (TAU) for 32 weeks. DBT-C consisted of weekly 90-min sessions, and included individual psychotherapy, parent management training (PMT), joint parent–child components and telephone coaching (Perepletchikova et al., 2017). TAU consisted of individual psychotherapy; treatment approach, session duration and frequency were determined by each clinician. The rate of positive response on the CGI-I was significantly higher in the DBT-C group (90.4%) compared to TAU (45.5%) at post-treatment and 3-month follow-up. Participants in DBT-C also reached a significantly higher level of functioning on the CGAS and had greater decreases in CGI-S scores compared to the TAU group at 32 weeks and 3-month follow-up. Parent/child acceptability and satisfaction were significantly higher in DBT-C compared with TAU. Outcomes show preliminary efficacy and feasibility of DBT-C (Perepletchikova et al., 2017).
Tolerance for specific negative affective states and coping-oriented cannabis use motives among college student cannabis users
Published in Journal of American College Health, 2022
Sarah A. Hartmann, Alison C. McLeish
While longitudinal studies are needed to further document the temporal sequence, theoretically, it is likely the lower levels of tolerance for sadness would lead to increased motivation to use cannabis to assist in tolerating that sadness. Thus, broader campus-wide initiatives that target tolerance of sadness could be useful for all students to help reduce their risk for developing motives for cannabis use that are most strongly associated with problematic use. Such interventions could not only reduce risk for cannabis use problems, but also susceptibility to other mental health problems as well. The skills training component of dialectical behavior therapy, with its focus on both mindfulness and distress tolerance skills, could be particularly useful for this type of preventive intervention.
Coping with Suicidal Urges: An Important Factor for Suicide Risk Assessment and Intervention
Published in Archives of Suicide Research, 2021
Alejandro Interian, Megan Chesin, Anna Kline, Lauren St. Hill, Arlene King, Rachael Miller, Miriam Latorre, Michael Gara, Barbara Stanley
The current study also examined suicide-related coping in relation to distress tolerance, which has been shown in previous research to be related to maladaptive coping (Anestis et al., 2012, 2013; Gorka et al., 2012; Zvolensky et al., 2010). Current results showed that each were independently predictive of a suicidal event and showed a significant, but small, correlation with one another. These results suggest that both provide important contributions to preventing suicide. Both are targeted in psychotherapies that have received support for reducing suicidal behavior (Brown et al., 2005; Jobes, 2012; Linehan et al., 2006). For example, Dialectical Behavior Therapy teaches skills to reduce life-threatening behaviors, as well as longer-term development of behavioral skills, including emotion regulation skills (Linehan, 1993). Not surprisingly, the current results are consistent with the evidence-base for these suicide-specific psychotherapies.
Related Knowledge Centers
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
- Mood Disorder
- Personality Disorder
- Psychotherapy
- Suicidal Ideation
- Traumatic Brain Injury
- Borderline Personality Disorder
- Self-Harm
- Substance Use Disorder
- Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder