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Dialectical Behavioral Therapy in the Public Schools. James B. Hanson, M.Ed. NASP Convention 2012 Philadelphia, PA. Outline. What is DBT? Core Components Adaptation to School Settings Why Did Lincoln High School Choose DBT? How was DBT implemented? Research Results
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Dialectical Behavioral Therapy in the Public Schools James B. Hanson, M.Ed. NASP Convention 2012 Philadelphia, PA
Outline • What is DBT? • Core Components • Adaptation to School Settings • Why Did Lincoln High School Choose DBT? • How was DBT implemented? • Research Results • Supports and Challenges to School Implementation
What is DBT? • A synthesis of: • Behaviorism • Mindfulness • Dialectics • Dialectics: “A means of finding fluidity and balancing acceptance and change in the fact of rigidity and impasse” (Miller et. al 2007).
Examples of Teen Dialectics • There is no absolute truth; everyone has something to offer. • I am doing the best I can and I can do better. • I am tough and I am gentle. • I may not have caused all of my problems, but I’m responsible for working on them. • A life worth living has happiness, sadness, anger, and calm, and all of these things are valuable and necessary.
Core Dialectic of DBT • Acceptance • Mindfulness • Radical Acceptance • Validation • Change • Problem Solving • Cognitive Behavioral • Goals and Contingencies
Who developed DBT? • Marsha Linehan, University of Washington • Attempts at traditional Cognitive Behavioral Therapy with suicidal and self-injurious clients did not work • Dialectical Behavioral Therapy with Suicidal Adolescents (2007). Alec Miller, Jill Rathaus, Marsha Linehan. New York: The Guilford Press
Who is it for? • Multi-diagnosed • BPD (Borderline Personality Disorder) • PTSD • Para-suicidal Behavior in Teens (cutting) • Eating Disorders (bulimia and binge eating) • Antisocial Personality • Depression in Elderly, Emergent in Teens
BPD Reconceptualized • Emotional Regulation (labile, anger) • Interpersonal Regulation (chaotic, abandoned) • Self Regulation (identity, emptiness) • Behavioral Regulation (suicide, cutting, impulsive) • Cognitive Regulation (black and white thinking)
Biosocial Theory of Behavior • Individual Emotional Regulation Problems • Biological, Genes, Emotional Vulnerabilities • Invalidating Environment (e.g., Chronic stress, chaos, perfectionism, inconsistency) • Learning: Observational, Operant, Respondent
Therapist’s Style • Reciprocal • Responsive • Serious • Appropriate Self-Disclosure • Warm Engagement • Radical Genuineness • Irreverent • Unorthodox Reframing • Plunging In-Humor • Confrontation • Calling The Bluff • Omnipotence and Impotence • Intensity and Silence
Efficacy Research with Teens • Dialectical Behavioral Therapy with Suicidal Adolescents (2007) • 12-16 week treatments instead of 1 year • Suicidal ideation, depression, and anxiety (perfectionism) • Six problem areas (violence, drinking, drugs, smoking, risky sexual behavior, disturbed eating)
Research Studies • Rathaus & Miller (2002)-Adolescents • Lower hospitalization (TAU 13% versus DBT 0%) • Higher retention (TAU 40% versus DBT 62%) • Fellows (1998)-Adolescents • Treatment group went from 539 inpatient hospital days pretreatment to 51 days post treatment
Adopt or Adapt? • Target population – same as research? • Comprehensive DBT – all components? • Setting – amenable finances, time, structure? • Professional training – skill set, credentials? • “Gold Standard” Five functions – skills, generalization, and environment of clients; capabilities and motivation of therapists
Lincoln High School, Portland OR • 1400 students • Middle to high socio-economic status • 100 Best High Schools in United States • Suicide was leading cause of death • About 20 parent meetings/year for cutting, suicidal ideation or attempt
Lincoln Statistics • High stress and anxiety (OHTS 2008: 13% of students considered suicide in last twelve months; 2012: 8.4%) • Before DBT: one to two suicides per year, since DBT no suicides • Before DBT: two to three placements into Portland Public School’s day treatment classroom per year, since DBT one placement
Assets-Lincoln High School • CDC Coordinated School Health Model • PBIS • RESPONSE suicide prevention • Student & Staff Anti-Bullying • Reconnecting Youth • School Improvement Plan with Mental Health goals
Character Traits: Respect, Understanding, Integrity, Community, Purpose
Oregon and PPS Health Class Standards • Explain how to build and maintain healthy relationships • Classify personal stressors at home, in school, peers • Describe how social environments affect well-being • Identify resources at home, school, and in the community for managing family and relationship problems • Practice strategies for managing and reducing stress, anger and conflict • Demonstrate the ability to take the perspective of others in a conflict situation • Identify influences that contribute to positive and negative self-image • Demonstrate pro-social communication skills • Demonstrate the steps in problem solving, anger management and impulse control .
DBT Core Components • Weekly Skills Class with two co-facilitators • Weekly Individual Sessions • “Phone Calls” (consultation to student in the counseling center for emergencies during the day when coaching on skills and reassurance is needed) • Parent training • Weekly DBT providers team meeting
Adaptations • “Advanced Health” on transcript; DBT is an elective credit class • Materials from Portland DBT Teen Program • Lincoln Staff/Teacher Training • Consultation with community providers • Fidelity checks from Portland DBT Program • Possible inclusion of DBT curriculum for general education health classes: University of Washington, James Mazza developed curriculum
Students • Self-referral from one-day preview of DBT skills in general education health classes • PBIS: Students who did not do well enough in Reconnecting Youth or mentoring program • IEP: Students identified with social/emotional needs • Students in day treatment who have collaborative problem solving skill base • Tier classification depends on student
Advance Health Skills/Dialectical Behavioral Skills Signed Contract • “I am familiar with the assumptions and theory of DBT” • “I agree to participate in DB Skills Training Class and individual coaching” • Parents agree to monthly parent meeting • BASC-2 teacher, parent, & self: pre and post • Diary card: basis of individual coaching • FBA as part of the coaching: Target Behavior
Inclusion Criteria • If suicidal, not the only counseling service • If cutting or eating disorder is serious, referral to Portland DBT or other community-based therapy • Step down or “graduates” from LHS DBT, other programs, community DBT, and PPS day treatment as appropriate • No requirement to quit other therapy: consultation with community provider • Identifiable “target behavior”
Sample IEP • Student will use social/emotional and behavioral skills to improve her scores on measures of Sense of Inadequacy, Anxiety, Depression, Atypicality and Withdrawal BASC-2 scales from the clinically significant to the average range on parent, teacher, and self-report
IEP Goals • Student will demonstrate the steps in problem solving, anger management, and impulse control by completing readings, discussion, and 100% of homework, including functional behavioral analysis, on problem-solving and emotional regulation skills. • Evaluation Procedures: transcript for GPA, school attendance, Advanced Health class attendance/homework, diary card, FBA, BASC-2.
Class Format • Mindfulness exercise • Homework • New Skill • Discussion and examples • FBA if emerging pattern of not doing homework, coming late, or other therapy-interfering behavior
Dialectics • Black and white? • Seeing polarities • “Both/and” not “either/or” • A life worth living has positive and negative aspects • Getting unstuck
Mindfulness • Full awareness • Present Moment • Wise Mind (Emotional & Logical) • Observe, Describe, Participate, Don’t Judge, Focus, Do What Works • Half Smile
Solving Problems • Goal Setting • Chain Analysis (Functional Behavioral Analysis) • Stinking Thinking
Distress Tolerance • Pain is a part of life • Pain versus suffering • Some things you can’t change • If you act impulsively, you can hurt yourself, others, and your goals
Distress Tolerance: ACCEPTS • Act • Contribute • Compare • Emotional Opposite • Push Away (Bracket) • Thought Change • Sensation Change
Distress Tolerance • Self-Soothe Kits • Vision • Hearing • Taste • Smell • Touch • Movement
Opposite to Emotion Action • FEAR-Hide-Approach • ANGER-Attack-Gently Avoid • SAD-Withdraw-Get Active • GUILT-Avoid-Face
Emotional Regulation • Radical Acceptance • Acknowledge, Recognize, Endure • Myths: It’ll Change, It’ll Kill Me, It’ll Last Forever
Emotional Regulation • RIDING THE WAVE • You are not the wave • Don’t avoid it • Don’t judge it • Don’t make it bigger or smaller • Don’t hold on to it
Interpersonal Effectiveness • What’s Your Objective?-DIG • Relationship-GIVE • Your Goals-RAN • Self Respect-FAST
Individual Coaching • Share more deeply than in the class • Class does not allow sharing of examples that have to do with cutting, suicidal ideation, or other matters that might trigger other students • Diary card guides the session • If diary card isn’t done, then student must complete then and there, and have less time to talk to coach
“Telephone Consultation” • Every student has the chance to receive immediate consultation during the week if trying to use skills and they aren’t working • Accommodation in IEP or 504 to come to the counseling center to see their DBT coach • Communicated to teachers if not on IEP/504 • See the student before target behavior occurs • Do not see the student for 24 or 48 hours after target behavior occurs • Shaping appropriate help-seeking
DBT Team Meetings • Purpose: “To allow therapists to discuss their difficulties providing treatment in a nonjudgmental and supportive environment that helps improve their motivation and capabilities” (Miller, et. al., 2007). • “Group therapy for therapists” • Integral part of DBT program
Lincoln’s Experience • Who has been a member of Lincoln’s DBT Team: • School Psychologist, School Nurse, School Social Work Intern, School Psychology Practicum Student, School Counselor, School Counseling Intern • Core Team Training: 6 Days, Portland DBT Readings: Miller (2007) Linehan (1993) • Leader Training for School Psychologist: • 6 Days, Portland DBT • 6 Days per year, Behavioral Tech