Abstract
BackgroundOvercontrol is a transdiagnostic cluster of traits associated with excessive psychological, behavioural and social inhibitory control. It is associated with psychiatric diagnoses of depression, restrictive eating disorders and/or obsessive-compulsive personality disorder. Radically Open Dialectical Behaviour Therapy is a transdiagnostic treatment for maladaptive overcontrol. This case series evaluates an adolescent adaption (RO-A) for a transdiagnostic group of adolescents identified as overcontrolled.MethodsTwenty-eight adolescents were consecutively referred for RO-A from two different National and Specialist Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services between June 2017 and February 2020. Baseline self-report measures assessed overcontrol characteristics, relationship and attachment quality and mental health symptoms of depression and eating disorders, which were repeated at discharge.ResultsAdolescents in this case series reported high rates of depression (78.6%), self-harm (64.3%) and eating disorders (78.6%). Most (85.7%) had two or more mental health diagnoses and all had previous mental health treatments before starting RO-A. The mean number of RO-A sessions attended was 18 group-based skills classes and 21 individual sessions over a mean period of 34 weeks. Significant improvements with medium and large effect sizes were reported in cognitive flexibility (d = 1.63), risk aversion (d = 1.17), increased reward processing (d = .79) and reduced suppression of emotional expression (d = .72). Adolescents also reported feeling less socially withdrawn (d = .97), more connected to others (d = 1.03), as well as more confident (d = 1.10) and comfortable (d = .85) in attachment relationships. Symptoms of depression (d = .71), eating disorders (d = 1.06) and rates of self-harm (V = .39) also significantly improved. Exploratory correlation analyses suggest improvements in overcontrol are moderately to strongly correlated with improvements in symptoms of depression and eating disorders.ConclusionsThis case series provides preliminary data that RO-A may be an effective new treatment for adolescents with overcontrol and moderate to severe mental health disorders like depression and eating disorders. RO-A led to improved management of overcontrol, improved relationship quality and reduced mental health symptoms. Further evaluation is indicated by this case series, particularly for underweight young people with eating disorders. More rigorous testing of the model is required as conclusions are only tentative due to the small sample size and methodological limitations.
Highlights
Overcontrol is a transdiagnostic cluster of traits associated with excessive psychological, behavioural and social inhibitory control
Radically Open Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (RO-A) led to improved management of overcontrol, improved relationship quality and reduced mental health symptoms
Further evaluation is indicated by this case series, for underweight young people with eating disorders
Summary
Overcontrol is a transdiagnostic cluster of traits associated with excessive psychological, behavioural and social inhibitory control It is associated with psychiatric diagnoses of depression, restrictive eating disorders and/or obsessive-compulsive personality disorder. Overcontrol is a transdiagnostic cluster of characteristics associated with excessive inhibitory control [1] This cluster of interrelated characteristics includes: cognitive and behavioural inflexibility, supressed emotional expression, perfectionism, heightened performance monitoring, increased threat sensitivity, and reduced reward processing [1, 2]. It can be expressed discreetly, and difficulties are not always overtly obvious when interacting with others People with this cluster of traits describe experiencing high levels of negative emotions, whilst displaying an outwardly inhibited or sometimes overly agreeable facade. Given the high rates of comorbidity [7,8,9], relapse [10,11,12,13], and treatment nonresponse [9, 14, 15] for individuals with the aforementioned cluster of diagnoses, treatments that target underlying transdiagnostic mechanisms and reconceptualise treatment targets to the management of broader temperamental and personality factors may help to improve outcomes and reduce relapse rates
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