Abstract

BackgroundTo date, there are no empirically validated treatments of good quality for adolescents showing suicidality and non-suicidal self-injurious behavior. Risk factors for suicide are impulsive and non-suicidal self-injurious behavior, depression, conduct disorders and child abuse. Behind this background, we tested the main hypothesis of our study; that Dialectical Behavioral Therapy for Adolescents is an effective treatment for these patients.MethodsDialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT) has been developed by Marsha Linehan - especially for the outpatient treatment of chronically non-suicidal patients diagnosed with borderline personality disorder. The modified version of DBT for Adolescents (DBT-A) from Rathus & Miller has been adapted for a 16-24 week outpatient treatment in the German-speaking area by our group. The efficacy of treatment was measured by a pre-/post- comparison and a one-year follow-up with the aid of standardized instruments (SCL-90-R, CBCL, YSR, ILC, CGI).ResultsIn the pilot study, 12 adolescents were treated. At the beginning of therapy, 83% of patients fulfilled five or more DSM-IV criteria for borderline personality disorder. From the beginning of therapy to one year after its end, the mean value of these diagnostic criteria decreased significantly from 5.8 to 2.75. 75% of patients were kept in therapy. For the behavioral domains according to the SCL-90-R and YSR, we have found effect sizes between 0.54 and 2.14.During treatment, non-suicidal self-injurious behavior reduced significantly. Before the start of therapy, 8 of 12 patients had attempted suicide at least once. There were neither suicidal attempts during treatment with DBT-A nor at the one-year follow-up.ConclusionsThe promising results suggest that the interventions were well accepted by the patients and their families, and were associated with improvement in multiple domains including suicidality, non-suicidal self-injurious behavior, emotion dysregulation and depression from the beginning of therapy to the one-year follow-up.

Highlights

  • To date, there are no empirically validated treatments of good quality for adolescents showing suicidality and non-suicidal self-injurious behavior

  • Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) has been developed by Marsha Linehan and colleagues [6] for the treatment of chronically parasuicidal adults with borderline personality disorder (BPD), whereas the term parasuicide as used by Linehan included suicidal behavior

  • Changes in current psychiatric diagnoses and DSM-IVCriteria for Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) Assessment at the beginning of therapy revealed that any patient had three, respectively four, current psychiatric DSM-IV axis-I diagnoses

Read more

Summary

Introduction

There are no empirically validated treatments of good quality for adolescents showing suicidality and non-suicidal self-injurious behavior. Risk factors for suicide are impulsive and non-suicidal selfinjurious behavior, depression, conduct disorders and child abuse. Behind this background, we tested the main hypothesis of our study; that Dialectical Behavioral Therapy for Adolescents is an effective treatment for these patients. Rathus and Miller [7] have adapted DBT for suicidal adolescents with borderline personality traits for its strategies of keeping patients committed to treatment and for its focus on reducing both suicidal and quality of life interfering behaviors. An open clinical trial by Rathus and Miller has demonstrated the effectiveness of this DBT adaptation by means of pre-post comparisons indicating significant reduction of suicidal ideation, of general psychiatric symptoms and of borderline personality symptoms [7]. Comparing a treatment-asusual group with a DBT-A group, Rathus and Miller have found less psychiatric hospitalizations during DBT-A treatment as well as significantly higher treatment completion rates for the DBT-A group

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call