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INFORMATION FOR

    Engaging the Dialectical Paradox: Applications of DBT with Complex Adolescents

    December 03, 2025

    YCSC Grand Rounds December 2, 2025
    Rebecca Kamody, PhD
    Assistant Professor, Yale Child Study Center

    ID
    13669

    Transcript

    • 00:00Hey. Good afternoon. We're gonna
    • 00:02get started,
    • 00:03and let's
    • 00:04let's open the gates for
    • 00:05our friends on Zoom.
    • 00:07Okay.
    • 00:08Next, week for Grand Rounds,
    • 00:10we're gonna have doctor Paul
    • 00:11Marri as part of our
    • 00:12leadership
    • 00:13series, so that's next week.
    • 00:16And today,
    • 00:19we have a real treat.
    • 00:21And this is someone
    • 00:23who is on our faculty,
    • 00:25but if you have not
    • 00:26seen her of late,
    • 00:28it's, no coincidence because she
    • 00:29is mostly in the virtual
    • 00:31world,
    • 00:32but very active in the
    • 00:33virtual world doing research with,
    • 00:35Michael Block's lab and teaching
    • 00:38all sorts of things.
    • 00:39And this is no other
    • 00:40than Rebecca Kamedy. So Rebecca
    • 00:42trained with us
    • 00:44and,
    • 00:45as a psychology pediatrics fellow,
    • 00:48and the rest has been
    • 00:49history. She's been, setting up
    • 00:51programs in eating disorders and
    • 00:53treatment of adolescents with personality
    • 00:55disorders.
    • 00:57She is the queen literally
    • 00:59of DBT. She knows everything.
    • 01:01She almost invented dialectical behavioral
    • 01:03therapy.
    • 01:05And I'll say a couple
    • 01:06of nice embarrassing things about
    • 01:07her. One is that, at
    • 01:09center left over there, Shay,
    • 01:10say hello.
    • 01:11That's Shay. That's,
    • 01:13Rebecca's better half.
    • 01:15And in the carriage, the
    • 01:16beautiful,
    • 01:18Sarah.
    • 01:19So we're delighted that you
    • 01:20are here with your family.
    • 01:22And the other embarrassing thing
    • 01:23that I'll say in public
    • 01:25is that, I've known Rebecca
    • 01:26for many years now, and
    • 01:28I have great,
    • 01:29fondness and admiration and respect
    • 01:31for her.
    • 01:32And one of the things
    • 01:33is that when I go
    • 01:34through my,
    • 01:36roster of outpatients,
    • 01:38without a doubt, the sickest
    • 01:40patients who I have, the
    • 01:41most complex patients who I
    • 01:42have are the Rebecca Kamedy
    • 01:44patients.
    • 01:46She is a superb clinician,
    • 01:49unflappable,
    • 01:51always,
    • 01:52smiling, always friendly,
    • 01:54but,
    • 01:55therapeutically
    • 01:56incredible. And I think that,
    • 01:59this is not just through
    • 02:00force of her personality and
    • 02:01her persona, but through all
    • 02:02the knowledge that she,
    • 02:04has and that she will
    • 02:05share with us today. So
    • 02:06let's welcome Rebecca Kamedy. Thanks
    • 02:08for being here today.
    • 02:16Well, it's a pleasure to
    • 02:17be back, and really amazing
    • 02:19to, I think, to come
    • 02:19back full circle and to
    • 02:21be in the child study
    • 02:22center again and to be
    • 02:22able to be here with
    • 02:24my four month old and
    • 02:25my husband. So it's a
    • 02:26pleasure to be here.
    • 02:27And I was thrilled when
    • 02:29Andres had asked me to
    • 02:30give this talk. DBT really
    • 02:31is a passion of mine,
    • 02:33one that we've tried to
    • 02:33integrate into some of these
    • 02:35different modalities here at the
    • 02:36Child Study Center,
    • 02:38and I'm excited to just
    • 02:39talk about some of the
    • 02:40nuances of it today and
    • 02:41hopefully inspire, some more collaborations,
    • 02:43some
    • 02:44some ideas of where we
    • 02:45can bring in some of
    • 02:46the programming.
    • 02:50No conflicts to disclose today.
    • 02:53And in terms of the
    • 02:54learning objectives,
    • 02:55I hope that we'll be
    • 02:56able to understand the tenets
    • 02:57of DBT that make it
    • 02:59a unique treatment from other
    • 03:00evidence based approaches for youth
    • 03:01with complex mental health concerns,
    • 03:04describe the applications of DBT
    • 03:05with transdiagnostic
    • 03:06youth mental health presentations,
    • 03:08and discuss some of the
    • 03:09adaptations of DBT for different
    • 03:11levels of care.
    • 03:15So starting with the the
    • 03:17history of DBT, I'm gonna
    • 03:18be focusing quite predominantly on,
    • 03:20adolescents and and youth today,
    • 03:22but, for those with some
    • 03:24familiarity
    • 03:25or those that are newer,
    • 03:26to the treatment, the original
    • 03:28development was designed for adults
    • 03:30with borderline personality disorder.
    • 03:33Where the inspiration
    • 03:34for the development came from
    • 03:36was actually,
    • 03:37from Marshall Linhan, the creator's
    • 03:39own, lived experience. She had
    • 03:41a diagnosis or misdiagnosis of
    • 03:42schizophrenia as a,
    • 03:44in her
    • 03:46kind of growing up periods,
    • 03:48and then was diagnosed with
    • 03:49borderline as an adult. And
    • 03:50she talked about this experience
    • 03:52of living life like she
    • 03:54had third degree burns on
    • 03:55her skin, in terms of
    • 03:56the emotional experience. That's something
    • 03:58that would feel like a
    • 03:59light gust of wind to
    • 04:00most people felt like the
    • 04:02most intense experience that that
    • 04:03she would have,
    • 04:04emotionally.
    • 04:06And recognizing that then with
    • 04:07that came a lot of
    • 04:08challenges with navigating our mental
    • 04:10health care system,
    • 04:12that when in different programs
    • 04:13that were specifically about change
    • 04:15based therapeutic strategies only, about
    • 04:17reframing cognitions, reframing,
    • 04:20behaviors,
    • 04:21making a lot of these
    • 04:22changes that it led to
    • 04:24some a lot of,
    • 04:26increased rates of hospitalization for
    • 04:28her and for others as
    • 04:29well as then the the
    • 04:30bounce back and rehospitalizations
    • 04:32that would happen.
    • 04:33So she found and had
    • 04:34this experience of needing a
    • 04:36different type of approach to
    • 04:37her treatment, one that provided
    • 04:39more of a balance in
    • 04:40terms of changing the behavior,
    • 04:44and it's something that then
    • 04:45has been studied in terms
    • 04:46of the differences
    • 04:47of when we look at
    • 04:49the DBT approaches to things
    • 04:50versus other change based therapeutic
    • 04:52strategies
    • 04:53of what can we do
    • 04:54to to reduce the need
    • 04:56for higher levels of care,
    • 04:58and the increase, being able
    • 05:00to stay in one's own
    • 05:01life.
    • 05:03The idea here also being
    • 05:05that if we're looking to
    • 05:05have cohesive treatment and one
    • 05:07that we can continue with
    • 05:08with our patients across the
    • 05:10the entire kind of span
    • 05:11of their treatment that limits,
    • 05:13again, needing to go in
    • 05:14and out of higher levels
    • 05:15of care,
    • 05:16that we can reduce some
    • 05:17of those barriers and end
    • 05:18up having a more
    • 05:21cohesive kind of course of
    • 05:22treatment, leading patients to meeting
    • 05:24their goals.
    • 05:28So I imagine everybody here
    • 05:29is familiar with our biopsychosocial
    • 05:31theories, and biopsychosocial
    • 05:33frameworks that we use in
    • 05:35kind of understanding where, our
    • 05:36our patients are at and
    • 05:38understanding the challenges that they
    • 05:39have. The biosocial theory that
    • 05:41underlies DBT specifically looks at
    • 05:43this biological vulnerability that one
    • 05:45may have to the emotions.
    • 05:46So the way that I
    • 05:48often talk about it with
    • 05:49patients and their families is
    • 05:50that some of us have
    • 05:51really big feelings. Right? We
    • 05:52have that high sensitivity,
    • 05:54and we feel them really
    • 05:55intensely. There's a high reactivity,
    • 05:57and once we experience those
    • 05:59emotions very intensely, it's a
    • 06:00slow return to baseline. So
    • 06:02once we've had that experience
    • 06:03of the emotional burn skin,
    • 06:05it takes us a long
    • 06:06time to get back to
    • 06:07what feels like,
    • 06:08our our more even keeled
    • 06:10place.
    • 06:11There's a transaction that happens
    • 06:13with the the invalidation in
    • 06:14our environment when we somehow
    • 06:16feel that it's communicated that
    • 06:18what we're thinking, what we're
    • 06:19feeling, or what we're doing
    • 06:21doesn't make sense.
    • 06:22Or we can think about
    • 06:23it in other ways as
    • 06:24being a forfeit
    • 06:25between the temperament of the
    • 06:27person and the environment.
    • 06:29And I think an important
    • 06:30piece here that I often
    • 06:31talk with families about is
    • 06:32there's both the overt and
    • 06:33covert invalidating environment in the
    • 06:36way. You of course, we've
    • 06:37all worked with parents I
    • 06:38think that may be more
    • 06:39critical of their children than
    • 06:40than we would like or
    • 06:41we may see some more
    • 06:42of that kind of o
    • 06:43overt invalidation
    • 06:51even keeled or or help
    • 06:53check the facts and recognize
    • 06:54that something isn't that big
    • 06:55of a deal, but how
    • 06:56that can actually feel very
    • 06:57invalidating than for somebody experiencing
    • 06:59things so intensely.
    • 07:02When we have that transaction
    • 07:03and those things coupled together
    • 07:05the theory behind the treatment
    • 07:06is that that's what leads
    • 07:07to the chronic emotional and
    • 07:08behavioral dysregulation,
    • 07:11and what I like about
    • 07:12the model itself is it
    • 07:13does give us a lot
    • 07:13of different points of intervention.
    • 07:15So of course, one of
    • 07:16the things that we'll talk
    • 07:17about in, when we're thinking
    • 07:18about youth specifically is how
    • 07:20do we create more validating
    • 07:21environments in the home and
    • 07:23their environments.
    • 07:24But also when it comes
    • 07:25to the biological vulnerability
    • 07:27there there's, of course, a
    • 07:27piece that we may think
    • 07:28about through psychiatric intervention, and
    • 07:31then there's also the piece
    • 07:32that comes from the skill
    • 07:33acquisition, and that's a big
    • 07:34part of the treatment that
    • 07:35we'll be talking more about.
    • 07:40In terms of then specifically
    • 07:41applications
    • 07:42of, DBT with youth, there
    • 07:45has been, of course, DVTA,
    • 07:47which is something that we
    • 07:48do a lot of work
    • 07:49in here with the skills,
    • 07:51with our fellows and with
    • 07:52some of our clinicians,
    • 07:53and there has more recently
    • 07:55will hit on, been the
    • 07:56DBTC or the child DBT.
    • 07:59Focusing just for a moment
    • 08:01on the DBTA, it is
    • 08:03when it comes to youth
    • 08:04our most robust evidence based,
    • 08:06compared to the DBTC,
    • 08:08and some of the reason
    • 08:09for that is
    • 08:11as we'll talk more about,
    • 08:13when thinking about some of
    • 08:14the targets of the treatment,
    • 08:16a lot of what we
    • 08:16consider borderline tendencies, some of
    • 08:18the impulsivity, some of the
    • 08:19intensity of the emotion, some
    • 08:19of the lability, some of
    • 08:19the challenges in relationships,
    • 08:20intensity of the emotions, some
    • 08:21of the lability, some of
    • 08:22the challenges in relationships
    • 08:24are also some developmentally normative
    • 08:26things in adolescence, so for
    • 08:28our teens with big feelings
    • 08:30and those really intense reactions
    • 08:32to those, it's a very
    • 08:33effective treatment, of adapting to
    • 08:35to this age group,
    • 08:37and has been, again, found
    • 08:38as
    • 08:39a evidence based treatment for
    • 08:41youth age thirteen to eighteen.
    • 08:44There's some writing about what
    • 08:45they call the extrapolation
    • 08:47of an adult module,
    • 08:48specifically in interpersonal effectiveness,
    • 08:52and how that in dbt
    • 08:53a we then target that
    • 08:54specifically related to the parent
    • 08:56child dynamic. So I'll talk
    • 08:58a little bit later on
    • 08:59on what that looks like
    • 09:00in terms of the walking
    • 09:01the middle path module.
    • 09:03But one of the things
    • 09:04that this that the DBT
    • 09:06for adolescents also highlights are
    • 09:07these typical dialectical dilemmas that
    • 09:09can come up between,
    • 09:11teens and their parents. Now
    • 09:13there's of course, and we'll
    • 09:14always say to patients that
    • 09:15there may be more than
    • 09:16this, but these are some
    • 09:17of those primary ones that
    • 09:18were that ends up becoming
    • 09:20this
    • 09:21dilemma or conflict that can
    • 09:22happen of, of course, when
    • 09:23the parent feels that they're
    • 09:24being maybe too strict, too
    • 09:26loose, the child feels that
    • 09:27they're being too strict.
    • 09:29How does a parent find
    • 09:30that middle ground between fostering
    • 09:32dependence and forcing independence?
    • 09:34And then said, how do
    • 09:35we foster independence?
    • 09:37And one of the ones
    • 09:38that comes up for I
    • 09:39think a number of us
    • 09:40who work with higher risk
    • 09:41patients,
    • 09:42helping parents and teens with
    • 09:44the dilemma of not making
    • 09:46light of problem behaviors, but
    • 09:48also how do we not
    • 09:48make too much of typical
    • 09:50teen behaviors?
    • 09:51This is something that comes
    • 09:52up all the time in,
    • 09:54my our trials with Michael,
    • 09:56and thinking of our patients
    • 09:57who have been hospitalized and
    • 09:59patient and parents who don't
    • 10:00know exactly
    • 10:02when do we start to
    • 10:03to loosen the reins on
    • 10:04things again. So there these
    • 10:06are typical, again,
    • 10:08teen and parent dilemmas that
    • 10:09happen, but in the context
    • 10:11of high risk behavior, it
    • 10:13ends up making it much
    • 10:14more challenging to navigate and
    • 10:15can lead to to more
    • 10:17conflict in the home.
    • 10:21In terms
    • 10:22of then thinking about the
    • 10:23the DBT for children, I'll
    • 10:25hit on briefly to give
    • 10:26the overview, but we'll be,
    • 10:28talking more about the area
    • 10:29that we have more of
    • 10:30the evidence base for currently.
    • 10:33The DBT for children is
    • 10:35was developed
    • 10:37for youth ages six to
    • 10:38twelve actually started here at
    • 10:40Yale. Francesca was a fellow
    • 10:42in the adult DBT program
    • 10:43when she was developing the
    • 10:45the protocol for for children
    • 10:48and it's meant to be
    • 10:49used for youth with any
    • 10:51presentations of childhood dysregulation
    • 10:53including predominantly DMDD.
    • 10:56They talk about in the
    • 10:57treatment itself children who are
    • 10:58super sensors. So again we
    • 11:00we all talk with families
    • 11:02about, having those big feelings,
    • 11:03and we're thinking about those
    • 11:04younger ones where we may
    • 11:06not have seen self harm
    • 11:07or like threatening behaviors, but
    • 11:08still an intensity and dysregulation
    • 11:10in their presentation.
    • 11:14One of the things that
    • 11:15I think is really apt,
    • 11:16especially thinking about at the
    • 11:18child study center where we
    • 11:19so often and so importantly
    • 11:20think about family systems,
    • 11:22and the role of parents
    • 11:24is that there is a
    • 11:25crucial nature of the parenting
    • 11:27component here. Right? It would
    • 11:28be very atypical that we
    • 11:29are thinking of a six
    • 11:30year old who can fully
    • 11:31regulate their emotions, and we
    • 11:32would have more concern about
    • 11:33that for maybe other reasons.
    • 11:35And so really what we're
    • 11:37thinking of here though for
    • 11:38those who have really intense
    • 11:39emotions and are those super
    • 11:41sensors
    • 11:41is when there is a
    • 11:43secure attachment with the parents
    • 11:44and there is that safe
    • 11:45modeling, the developing modeling and
    • 11:47coaching of forms of self
    • 11:49regulation.
    • 11:51An important piece is it's
    • 11:52actually grounded primarily in the
    • 11:53parents ability to even mentalize
    • 11:55their child's experience. And so
    • 11:57oftentimes we're having to think
    • 11:58before an intervention like this,
    • 11:59how are we building up
    • 12:00the parent's own mentalization of
    • 12:02their their child's,
    • 12:03state.
    • 12:05And that leads to some
    • 12:06challenges and assumptions about the
    • 12:08family's ability. Right? Where are
    • 12:09they at psyche psychologically
    • 12:12and and the family's ability
    • 12:13to understand these concepts and
    • 12:15model in a regulated way?
    • 12:17What is their availability to
    • 12:18do this and what resources
    • 12:20they have available, to be
    • 12:21able to engage in that
    • 12:22type of work?
    • 12:27Some of the so so
    • 12:28with that background in mind
    • 12:30and thinking about just what
    • 12:31what has been adapted for
    • 12:32for children and then for
    • 12:33adolescents,
    • 12:34thinking about some of the
    • 12:35unique aspects of DBT itself,
    • 12:39I want to hit on
    • 12:40some of the aspects that
    • 12:41make it a bit different
    • 12:42from other treatments and again
    • 12:43some of the things that
    • 12:44we may think about how
    • 12:45these are integrated into different
    • 12:47approaches.
    • 12:48So one of the most
    • 12:49unique aspects of DBT from
    • 12:51some of the other change
    • 12:52based approaches is the integration
    • 12:55with the acceptance based techniques.
    • 12:57So, we're taking what we
    • 12:58know are a lot of
    • 12:59evidence based change based strategies
    • 13:01from CBT,
    • 13:03integrating in with some more
    • 13:04Zen and Buddhist philosophies.
    • 13:07When it comes to the
    • 13:08change based strategies that we
    • 13:09focus on in the treatment
    • 13:10we're thinking about basic behaviorism,
    • 13:12how are we reinforcing,
    • 13:14learned new behaviors and replacing
    • 13:16behaviors that we want to
    • 13:18change that may be distractive
    • 13:19or destructive,
    • 13:20excuse me self harm,
    • 13:22substance use,
    • 13:24lashing out,
    • 13:26using cognitive techniques to in
    • 13:28terms of understanding distortions and
    • 13:31cognitive reframes
    • 13:33of of one's experience,
    • 13:35And then quite and one
    • 13:36of the most important pieces,
    • 13:37the skill building. So if
    • 13:38we're yes, we need to
    • 13:40use behavioral strategies and cognitive
    • 13:41techniques to get there, but
    • 13:42the skill acquisition being one
    • 13:44of the most, important parts
    • 13:46of the treatment itself.
    • 13:49On the acceptance based side
    • 13:51of things, and these are
    • 13:52some of the the nuance
    • 13:53pieces that we bring in
    • 13:54as part of the the
    • 13:55framing of the treatment,
    • 13:57it's critical to the treatment
    • 13:59itself to for there to
    • 14:00be a validating environment of
    • 14:02finding a kernel of truth
    • 14:03no matter how ineffective the
    • 14:04patient is presenting or in
    • 14:07terms of their approach to
    • 14:08things of finding something that
    • 14:09we can validate in terms
    • 14:10of their experience and making
    • 14:12their emotional experience,
    • 14:14something that is known and
    • 14:15understood in the therapeutic room.
    • 14:18The non judgmental approach,
    • 14:20these are two things both
    • 14:21the validating environment and non
    • 14:23judgmental approach that have been
    • 14:25identified through some of the
    • 14:26research and the mechanisms of
    • 14:27change of being crucial,
    • 14:29as opposed to just pushing
    • 14:30for the behavioral change and
    • 14:32then the acceptance of wherever
    • 14:33the patient is at.
    • 14:35And that is where then
    • 14:36the idea of the dialectics
    • 14:37come in is that if
    • 14:39we we can get imbalanced
    • 14:40in either way. Right? If
    • 14:41we push for change too
    • 14:42much that and we create
    • 14:43that sense of invalidation,
    • 14:45a patient may rebuff treatment,
    • 14:47may disengage,
    • 14:48may not have the space
    • 14:49to be able to work
    • 14:50through where they're at. But
    • 14:52if we lean too heavily
    • 14:52on the acceptance, then we
    • 14:53don't make change, and we
    • 14:54see it stagnant. And we
    • 14:55have I see a lot
    • 14:56of head nods. I think
    • 14:57we've all been there in
    • 14:57the therapy room where it
    • 14:58does kinda feel like you
    • 14:59are just very stuck. So
    • 15:00we're we're constantly on this
    • 15:02teeter totter of the integration
    • 15:04of the both of both
    • 15:05and how do we accept
    • 15:06where somebody is in order
    • 15:08to make change rather than
    • 15:09than leaning too heavily in
    • 15:10the either or.
    • 15:16So in terms of the
    • 15:17other one of the other
    • 15:18unique aspects related to the
    • 15:20application
    • 15:21of the the dialectics behind
    • 15:23the treatment is actually an
    • 15:24introduction to the concepts.
    • 15:26So there is this important
    • 15:27piece of helping youth and
    • 15:29their families understand the whole
    • 15:30concept of dialectics,
    • 15:32and the assumptions that underline
    • 15:34the treatment.
    • 15:35The idea of the both
    • 15:37and rather than the either
    • 15:38or that is such a
    • 15:40integral piece of working with
    • 15:42with both youth and with
    • 15:43their parents in the treatment
    • 15:45modality
    • 15:46that we can go to
    • 15:47extremes in either direction in
    • 15:48terms of our emotion mind
    • 15:50and and what is when
    • 15:51the emotions drive the bus.
    • 15:52Right? That we're very impulsive.
    • 15:53We do whatever those big
    • 15:54feelings are telling us to
    • 15:56do
    • 15:56versus the other end of
    • 15:57the extreme if we're too
    • 15:59rational and we're only in
    • 16:00rational mind how that can
    • 16:01be very invalidating.
    • 16:02How do we find this
    • 16:04middle path of actually getting
    • 16:05to what we call the
    • 16:06wise mind place
    • 16:07where we validate our emotions
    • 16:09and use and are appreciative
    • 16:10of what they give us,
    • 16:12but also bring facts and
    • 16:13logic into things.
    • 16:17And true to then the
    • 16:18modality itself, there's the assumptions
    • 16:20that underlie the treatment, that
    • 16:21make it unique, that that
    • 16:22lean heavily into the dialectics.
    • 16:25There's these are some of
    • 16:26the assumptions that if you're
    • 16:28doing the treatment that you're
    • 16:29saying I will agree to
    • 16:30this is that we're all
    • 16:31doing the best we can,
    • 16:32and we all can try
    • 16:33harder increase our motivation for
    • 16:35change and be more skillful.
    • 16:37An important piece here is
    • 16:38that it doesn't just apply
    • 16:39to patients. It is something
    • 16:40that I often talk about
    • 16:41with patients is that that's
    • 16:42true for me in the
    • 16:43room with them. That's true
    • 16:44for their parents. Right? That's
    • 16:45true for everybody involved.
    • 16:47So we're not blaming anyone.
    • 16:48We are assuming we're all
    • 16:49doing our best that maybe
    • 16:51because of different emotions at
    • 16:52different times where we're less
    • 16:53effective,
    • 16:54and so we can all
    • 16:55keep trying harder.
    • 16:57And I think what's really
    • 16:58nice about some of these
    • 16:59assumptions in that way is
    • 17:01it it takes the blame
    • 17:02away from any one individual,
    • 17:03right, of being on the
    • 17:04parent, of being on the
    • 17:05teen, but also gives agency
    • 17:07in in continuing to make
    • 17:08change.
    • 17:10One of the other assumptions
    • 17:11of the treatment, we may
    • 17:12not have caused our problems,
    • 17:14and we can also still
    • 17:15have agency in finding solutions
    • 17:17to change our circumstances and
    • 17:18responses.
    • 17:19I think that this is
    • 17:20crucial when we're working with
    • 17:22our our patients with chronically
    • 17:24invalidating environments whether that is
    • 17:26because of their their home
    • 17:28environment, whether that is larger
    • 17:30systems or or world issues.
    • 17:32I'm looking at Christy thinking
    • 17:33about what our our patients
    • 17:35in the gender program are
    • 17:36navigating and how do we
    • 17:38still find ways of navigating
    • 17:39these
    • 17:40impossible situations as
    • 17:42effectively as possible.
    • 17:46That figuring out and changing
    • 17:48the cause of behavior is
    • 17:49more effective is a more
    • 17:51effective change than judging and
    • 17:52blaming,
    • 17:53so often I think when
    • 17:55we're working with families or
    • 17:56with individuals who may be
    • 17:58internalizing some of their feelings
    • 18:00that there there's often a
    • 18:01lot of self judgment, self
    • 18:02blame,
    • 18:04or judgment or blame from
    • 18:05others in the system. And
    • 18:06so it's said if we
    • 18:07can get curious about what
    • 18:09is causing a behavior that
    • 18:11we're assuming that all behavior
    • 18:12including actions, thoughts, and emotions
    • 18:14are caused, which gives us
    • 18:16again a place to to
    • 18:17really jump in and to
    • 18:19get,
    • 18:20to get very curious about
    • 18:21what is leading to these
    • 18:22higher risk behaviors.
    • 18:25So there there is an
    • 18:26assumption of the treatment that
    • 18:27if every behavior is caused,
    • 18:29right, whether that is because
    • 18:30of something internally or externally
    • 18:32in the environment, that if
    • 18:34we can understand it, it
    • 18:35gives us a place to
    • 18:36make change.
    • 18:38And so there is DBT
    • 18:39though that we'll talk and
    • 18:41we have been talking some
    • 18:42about,
    • 18:43some of the more,
    • 18:45intellectual underpinnings of it, it
    • 18:47is a very behavioral treatment.
    • 18:49So one of where it
    • 18:50comes down to it and
    • 18:51when we're thinking about all
    • 18:52behavior is caused, if we
    • 18:53can under it, if we
    • 18:54can do a chain analysis
    • 18:55on it, if we can
    • 18:56start with what that behavior
    • 18:57is, whether it's self harm,
    • 18:59suicide suicidality,
    • 19:01again externalizing
    • 19:02behaviors, avoidance.
    • 19:04If we can understand what
    • 19:05is reinforcing it by understanding
    • 19:07the consequences, if we can
    • 19:08understand the prompting event that
    • 19:10started it and understand every
    • 19:11single link in that chain,
    • 19:13even starting back with the
    • 19:14vulnerability factors, it gives us
    • 19:16a multitude of points of
    • 19:18intervention. So really the the
    • 19:21whole behavioral focus of the
    • 19:22treatment is to to imbue
    • 19:24and and to give, the
    • 19:26patients that we work with
    • 19:27in that agency to make
    • 19:28change.
    • 19:30A critical point that the
    • 19:32the image doesn't actually show
    • 19:33itself is the solution analysis,
    • 19:35which has to come after
    • 19:36the chain analysis and and
    • 19:37is quite critical because once
    • 19:39we understand the behavior, we
    • 19:41understand that it's caused, which
    • 19:42is so important. We also
    • 19:43wanna know what to do
    • 19:44about it. Right?
    • 19:46And that is one of
    • 19:47the pieces that will come
    • 19:48into play as we're talking
    • 19:49more about the the unique,
    • 19:51components with the skills.
    • 19:55Importantly, there's an assumption to
    • 19:57the treatment that new behavior
    • 19:59must be learned in all
    • 20:00relevant contexts, so we can
    • 20:02learn all the skills that
    • 20:03we want when we're in
    • 20:04the hospital or in the
    • 20:05therapy room, but if we
    • 20:06don't know how to apply
    • 20:07them in the other relevant
    • 20:08contexts in the home, at
    • 20:09school, in the different stressful
    • 20:10context that we're in, that
    • 20:10it won't be effective, and
    • 20:10so that the
    • 20:13that it won't be effective.
    • 20:14And so that that's a
    • 20:15a critical part of the
    • 20:16treatment is that generalizability.
    • 20:21And then the the ultimate
    • 20:22dialectic of the treatment itself
    • 20:23that change is the only
    • 20:24constant. So that we're thinking
    • 20:26about that there will continue
    • 20:27to be change in terms
    • 20:28of behavior, how our patients
    • 20:29will relate to us, what
    • 20:31is evolving in the therapy
    • 20:32room, what's happening at home,
    • 20:34and that really then the
    • 20:35treatment is always about how
    • 20:36can we respond to that
    • 20:37most effectively and work towards
    • 20:39our goals.
    • 20:43So in addition to the
    • 20:46the applications of the,
    • 20:48these kind of underlying,
    • 20:50components of the dialectics,
    • 20:52one of the other things
    • 20:53really unique to DBT and
    • 20:55I think to the piece
    • 20:56that, Andres had brought up
    • 20:58of some of our high
    • 20:59risk,
    • 21:00patients that we've shared or
    • 21:01that we see coming through,
    • 21:03the child study center and
    • 21:04other contexts is DBT was
    • 21:06developed specifically to manage high
    • 21:08risk behaviors at the outpatient
    • 21:09level of care.
    • 21:11The idea being again from
    • 21:13that first slide is that
    • 21:14it leads to
    • 21:16a disruption in cohesive treatment
    • 21:17if somebody's constantly needing to
    • 21:19go to a higher level
    • 21:20of care. So it's specifically
    • 21:22designed to manage these at
    • 21:23a lower level of care
    • 21:25in a way that both
    • 21:25the patient and the provider
    • 21:27feel supported,
    • 21:28and that leads to the
    • 21:29multi component nature of it,
    • 21:32which for folks not familiar
    • 21:34with the treatment, before I
    • 21:35pop it up here, you'll
    • 21:35see where it's not your
    • 21:36even though it's outpatient, it's
    • 21:38not your typical once weekly
    • 21:39therapy,
    • 21:40which is one of the
    • 21:41things that can make it
    • 21:42challenging as well, in terms
    • 21:44of how to be implemented.
    • 21:46So to truly be, implementing
    • 21:48DBT and when we're thinking
    • 21:50about the most robust evidence
    • 21:51base, it's anything that's not
    • 21:53in italics is a requirement.
    • 21:55So we have the the
    • 21:56four modes of the treatment
    • 21:57including individual therapy one to
    • 21:59two times per week,
    • 22:00a separate skills training group
    • 22:02so that you're keeping the
    • 22:03skills separate from therapy itself,
    • 22:06The ability to engage in
    • 22:08intersession phone coaching,
    • 22:10so the idea that you're
    • 22:11probably gonna need your therapist
    • 22:13outside of those sessions, but
    • 22:14how do we have it
    • 22:15be a coaching,
    • 22:17type of contact rather than
    • 22:18intersession therapy.
    • 22:20And then also the idea
    • 22:22of the consult team.
    • 22:24As a plug, I I
    • 22:25believe in consult team for
    • 22:26DBT or outside of DBT.
    • 22:28The idea is that, it
    • 22:30is hard for providers to
    • 22:31work with high risk patients.
    • 22:33And so,
    • 22:34anybody who does DBT will
    • 22:35say if they're not on
    • 22:36the team then it's not
    • 22:37DBT. And it's the idea
    • 22:38of providers coming together weekly
    • 22:40or biweekly and to talk
    • 22:41about their own burnout with
    • 22:42working with these clients,
    • 22:44in order to to prevent
    • 22:46any impact on the clinical
    • 22:48work itself or if there
    • 22:49is impact on the clinical
    • 22:50work to be able to
    • 22:51get support with that and
    • 22:52has a a very kind
    • 22:53of clear structure to it
    • 22:55so that it's different than
    • 22:56something like supervision or peer
    • 22:58supervision and is really meant
    • 22:59to be support and therapy
    • 23:01for therapists.
    • 23:03Then in addition to those,
    • 23:05of course, that I have
    • 23:06these ones in it, the
    • 23:07italics that are often a
    • 23:08part of of what the
    • 23:10multiple components look like for
    • 23:11coheed for comprehensive treatment.
    • 23:14So often these high risk
    • 23:15patients do have psychiatric,
    • 23:16concerns that do require
    • 23:18psychiatric intervention in the medication
    • 23:20management piece.
    • 23:22I don't know any of
    • 23:23the teens that I work
    • 23:23with that we're not also
    • 23:24doing some type of family
    • 23:26therapy because often as we're
    • 23:27talking about the importance of
    • 23:28the family system.
    • 23:30And then I have under
    • 23:31the skills group here ideally,
    • 23:33we're doing what we'd consider
    • 23:35multifamily skills group. So not
    • 23:36just being the kid learning
    • 23:37skills, but parents being there
    • 23:39as well.
    • 23:41The challenge there that we'll
    • 23:42come to to some of
    • 23:43the barriers
    • 23:44is for working families having,
    • 23:45you know, two parents be
    • 23:46able to attend a multifamily
    • 23:48skills group at the same
    • 23:49time as their child requires
    • 23:51a lot of resource and
    • 23:52time in terms of time
    • 23:53availability,
    • 23:54and yet we do know
    • 23:55that it is the most
    • 23:56successful
    • 23:57in terms of managing and
    • 23:58changing behaviors.
    • 24:01As you can imagine from
    • 24:02the multifamily and the way
    • 24:03the multifamily skills groups can
    • 24:05work, it not only, provides
    • 24:07the ability to teach the
    • 24:08parents the skills themselves, but
    • 24:09then can create more of
    • 24:10that validating environment as well
    • 24:12that they're understanding more of
    • 24:14what their child's experience is
    • 24:16and how to be more
    • 24:17effective and can understand more
    • 24:18of where they they play
    • 24:19a role in that in,
    • 24:21in what occurs.
    • 24:27So importantly, I I hit
    • 24:28on these two pieces,
    • 24:31a bit briefly, but I
    • 24:32do want to to hit
    • 24:33on them a bit more
    • 24:34to think about kind of
    • 24:35what makes again the treatment,
    • 24:37unique in and of itself.
    • 24:38The idea of the intersession
    • 24:40support is often a really
    • 24:41scary thing for new providers.
    • 24:43Starting dbt it can feel
    • 24:46like the idea of that
    • 24:47you're on call twenty four
    • 24:48seven or that the the
    • 24:49therapist is a crisis line.
    • 24:51And that there's this really
    • 24:53important piece of the the
    • 24:54intersession communication
    • 24:56and the phone coaching being
    • 24:57very structured. So what makes
    • 24:59it different than just being
    • 25:00on call twenty four seven
    • 25:02is in a lot of
    • 25:02ways a contract that one
    • 25:04enters into with the client,
    • 25:06before starting the treatment
    • 25:08of the true focus being
    • 25:10coaching in between sessions. So
    • 25:12if there is something that
    • 25:13really requires another session then
    • 25:15another session should be scheduled,
    • 25:16but if it is somebody
    • 25:18trying to generalize their skills,
    • 25:19they're having urges coming up
    • 25:21and they just can't problem
    • 25:22solve and figure it out
    • 25:23on their own, I always
    • 25:24tell my patients I would
    • 25:25rather spend five minutes on
    • 25:26the phone with them or
    • 25:27ten minutes on the phone
    • 25:28with them problem solving, being
    • 25:29skillful to then resist the
    • 25:31urge rather than us having
    • 25:32to spend our whole therapy
    • 25:33session figuring out why that
    • 25:34behavior happened, right? So it's
    • 25:36this very structured,
    • 25:38very time limited way of
    • 25:40providing support in between session
    • 25:42and the theory again behind
    • 25:44it being that as these
    • 25:46patients are trying to make
    • 25:47a lot of changes across
    • 25:48these different contexts,
    • 25:49it's almost unfair of us
    • 25:51as providers to expect that
    • 25:52they're just gonna remember everything
    • 25:53that happened in session and
    • 25:54know how to implement it
    • 25:55perfectly. Right? And so that
    • 25:57idea of reaching out for
    • 25:59specifically for phone coaching.
    • 26:01So there's even scripts that
    • 26:02can go along with it.
    • 26:03I will say every time
    • 26:05a patient reaches out for
    • 26:06phone coaching, I ask what
    • 26:07did they try why are
    • 26:08they coaching, like, what is
    • 26:09the urge, what do they
    • 26:11need help with, and that
    • 26:12we can be very, very
    • 26:13targeted and have it, again,
    • 26:14stay very time limited. I've
    • 26:16heard from other providers that
    • 26:17if it's more than ten
    • 26:18minutes, it's not a coaching
    • 26:19session. I will say sometimes
    • 26:20it gets a little bit
    • 26:21longer than that, but you
    • 26:22try to keep it very
    • 26:23truncated. Right? And and the
    • 26:25other important piece here is
    • 26:26that because it's not a
    • 26:27hotline is that you're not
    • 26:29always available. Right? And so
    • 26:31that idea of when a
    • 26:32patient does reach out, I
    • 26:33will get back to them
    • 26:33as soon as I can.
    • 26:35But having a new baby
    • 26:36is that I, you know,
    • 26:37I won't always be available
    • 26:39twenty four seven and that
    • 26:40that's okay and that there's
    • 26:41also the contingency plans in
    • 26:42place for how that then
    • 26:44they can have that support
    • 26:45in in case an emergency
    • 26:46does come up. So there's
    • 26:48this very important explicit discussion
    • 26:50as part of the treatment
    • 26:51is again that you're you're
    • 26:52not the a crisis line
    • 26:53but rather an intercession form
    • 26:55of support to generalize the
    • 26:57skills.
    • 26:59One of the other really
    • 27:00unique pieces that I think
    • 27:02is crucial and will hit
    • 27:04on as a piece of
    • 27:05the mechanism of change is
    • 27:06the skills training component actually
    • 27:08being separate from the therapy
    • 27:10itself.
    • 27:11So the idea being that
    • 27:13the therapy and the therapeutic
    • 27:14relationship is so critical to
    • 27:17to making gains that learning
    • 27:18skills is a completely separate
    • 27:20thing. Right? It's almost more
    • 27:21didactic in a way. It's
    • 27:22like a class. If If
    • 27:24anybody has ever been part
    • 27:25of the skills training session,
    • 27:26it is you really are
    • 27:28following a curriculum in a
    • 27:29way, right, and just teaching
    • 27:30certain emotion regulation skills or
    • 27:32certain distress tolerance skills.
    • 27:34And while your therapist may
    • 27:35also be your skills trainer
    • 27:36that we're thinking about those
    • 27:37as very separate roles to
    • 27:39allow the therapy to continue
    • 27:41to say the processing,
    • 27:43of of the therapy and
    • 27:44the skills learning and training
    • 27:45is separate.
    • 27:49In terms of the skills,
    • 27:50themselves, I I think a
    • 27:51number of people on the
    • 27:52Zoom and some I see
    • 27:53in this room have have
    • 27:54done, DBT skills,
    • 27:56seminars with me.
    • 27:58It is one of the
    • 27:59the most crucial,
    • 28:00parts of the treatment.
    • 28:02I will probably keep saying
    • 28:03that about all parts of
    • 28:04the treatment as we're trying
    • 28:05to think about what which
    • 28:06aspects are are the most
    • 28:07effective, but that there is
    • 28:09there's these different areas of
    • 28:10the skills that we're believing
    • 28:11that patients with the intensity
    • 28:13of these emotional experiences and
    • 28:14dysregulation,
    • 28:15may have deficits in that
    • 28:17we're having to build up.
    • 28:19So the five that come
    • 28:20into play for our adolescents,
    • 28:23are gonna be mindfulness,
    • 28:25distress tolerance, emotion regulation, interpersonal
    • 28:28effectiveness,
    • 28:29and then this additional
    • 28:30module of the walking the
    • 28:31middle path. In the adult
    • 28:33curriculum you don't have that
    • 28:34one it's just integrated into
    • 28:36interpersonal effectiveness.
    • 28:38But in hitting on on
    • 28:40each of these briefly because
    • 28:41of the we won't be
    • 28:42hitting on the skills too
    • 28:43much today, but we always
    • 28:45happy to talk with folks
    • 28:47about those more.
    • 28:49It's true to the dialectical
    • 28:51underpinnings of the treatment itself
    • 28:52of we have to balance
    • 28:53acceptance and change, so when
    • 28:55we're learning the full modules
    • 28:57and the course of things,
    • 28:59if you're going through the
    • 29:00entire curriculum, your change based
    • 29:01skills are gonna be those
    • 29:02that focus on actually changing
    • 29:04your emotions and regulating them.
    • 29:05So emotion regulation,
    • 29:07actually learning how to be
    • 29:08more interpersonally
    • 29:09effective with the idea if
    • 29:11we have more fulfilling,
    • 29:13more effective relationships that we
    • 29:15have less we're less prone
    • 29:16to dysregulation in our experiences.
    • 29:20And those are gonna be
    • 29:21a lot of the skills,
    • 29:22especially the ones related to
    • 29:23emotion regulation that are gonna
    • 29:24feel a little more similar
    • 29:26to your more traditional kind
    • 29:27of CBT approaches.
    • 29:29Comparatively
    • 29:30there's entire modules of learning
    • 29:32just how do we not
    • 29:32make the situation worse. Right?
    • 29:34And these are gonna be
    • 29:35the acceptance based skills.
    • 29:37Learning very concretely what and
    • 29:39how do we do mindfulness
    • 29:41and also the distress tolerance
    • 29:43which is I think one
    • 29:45of the the most difficult
    • 29:46to get buy in with
    • 29:47some teens because really the
    • 29:49focus of all those skills
    • 29:50is again how do we
    • 29:51not make the situation better,
    • 29:53but how do we not
    • 29:53make it worse for them?
    • 29:56Because what is often happening
    • 29:57for patients coming to this
    • 29:59treatment
    • 30:00is that their responses to
    • 30:01their emotions, the behavioral responses
    • 30:03ends up creating more distress
    • 30:05in their life and hasn't,
    • 30:07solved the original problem. Right?
    • 30:08So if there is a
    • 30:09crisis where you've broken up
    • 30:11with your girlfriend or boyfriend
    • 30:12or you failed the test
    • 30:13or got in a fight
    • 30:14with mom and dad and
    • 30:15you self harmed, there's still
    • 30:17the issue to deal with,
    • 30:18and we've also then created
    • 30:19this big problem that we
    • 30:20have to solve. And so
    • 30:21we're teaching both those skills
    • 30:23of when we can change
    • 30:24the situation, but also when
    • 30:25we just have to tolerate
    • 30:26the situation.
    • 30:29And then in the synthesis
    • 30:30in the middle, we're thinking
    • 30:31of again that the idea
    • 30:32of the walking the middle
    • 30:33path, which is really gonna
    • 30:35hit on the ideas of
    • 30:36the dialectics of the both
    • 30:37and, in those parent teen
    • 30:39relationships,
    • 30:41and and finding that balance
    • 30:42between acceptance and change.
    • 30:49One of the other,
    • 30:50areas that that is really
    • 30:52unique
    • 30:53about the treatment that I
    • 30:53think often gets lost,
    • 30:55that is one of the
    • 30:56things that I'm excited to
    • 30:57hit on today is actually
    • 30:58the multistage nature of the
    • 31:00treatment. When we're thinking about
    • 31:01the comprehensive
    • 31:02treatment,
    • 31:04a lot of people often
    • 31:05only think about stage one,
    • 31:07and this is the the
    • 31:08DBT house which kinda illustrates
    • 31:10what the full course of
    • 31:11treatment looks like. So a
    • 31:12lot of times when when
    • 31:13we're thinking of of the
    • 31:14treatment itself, we're thinking just
    • 31:15that stage one of when
    • 31:16somebody is experiencing that severe
    • 31:18behavioral dis control. Right? That
    • 31:20we're thinking about a house
    • 31:21is on fire, you're on
    • 31:22that bottom floor and we're
    • 31:24having to get in control
    • 31:25of behavior. So we're thinking
    • 31:26about any of those life
    • 31:27threatening behaviors
    • 31:28and what do we have
    • 31:29to do or any high
    • 31:30risk behaviors that are causing
    • 31:31us problems that we have
    • 31:33to bind a certain amount
    • 31:35of behavioral control in order
    • 31:37to move on to the
    • 31:38next floor of the house.
    • 31:40When we get to stage
    • 31:41two, if we have behavioral
    • 31:42control of our emotional and
    • 31:44behavioral responses to things, then
    • 31:46we can actually address the
    • 31:47idea of the emotional experiencing
    • 31:49and getting in touch. Now
    • 31:51I think the what I
    • 31:52really like about the framing
    • 31:53of the house is that
    • 31:54it shows why that oftentimes
    • 31:56we or why we need
    • 31:58to have behavioral control first
    • 31:59even if the part that
    • 32:00is more important to our
    • 32:01patient is the emotional experiencing.
    • 32:04I you know, I've had
    • 32:05a number of patients that
    • 32:06will be very frustrated when
    • 32:07we're having to focus on
    • 32:08the behavioral piece to start
    • 32:10because there is a lot
    • 32:11of valid truth in,
    • 32:13how important the emotional component
    • 32:15and what they're wanting to
    • 32:16hit on related to,
    • 32:18the things that they're getting
    • 32:19in touch with are. And
    • 32:20the framing of the treatment
    • 32:22is that in order to
    • 32:23do that, we have to
    • 32:24have enough behavioral control to
    • 32:25not be in the hospital,
    • 32:29crisis. And so you're getting
    • 32:31this buy in to the
    • 32:32treatment that I can that
    • 32:33if we can get that
    • 32:34end of control, let's spend
    • 32:36all the time in stage
    • 32:37two that that we need,
    • 32:38right, to be able to
    • 32:39to get more in touch
    • 32:40with the actual emotional experiencing.
    • 32:43That allows once we're able
    • 32:45to address,
    • 32:46when we're thinking about kind
    • 32:47of what is being addressed
    • 32:48in that stage, any experiences
    • 32:49of quiet or internal desperation
    • 32:51to move on to stage
    • 32:52three of the problems with
    • 32:54living. So actually getting connected
    • 32:56to a life that feels
    • 32:57worth living,
    • 32:58identifying values, working towards kind
    • 33:00of value based action and
    • 33:02dealing with the ins and
    • 33:03outs of the ordinary happiness
    • 33:05and unhappiness.
    • 33:07For patients with those very
    • 33:09intense emotional experiences that can
    • 33:10be a new phase, right?
    • 33:12That there can just be
    • 33:13typical ups and downs and
    • 33:14that it doesn't have to
    • 33:15be a crisis, and how
    • 33:16do we navigate that and
    • 33:18engage in value based action
    • 33:20that ultimately gets us up
    • 33:22to stage four where we
    • 33:24are thinking of more dynamic
    • 33:25kind of nature to the
    • 33:27the therapeutic,
    • 33:29the the therapeutic modality. So
    • 33:30we're focusing on the capacity
    • 33:32for sustained joy. What I
    • 33:33say is kinda ultimately we
    • 33:35would get to that very
    • 33:36peak experience of, like, self
    • 33:38actualization, but that ongoing work
    • 33:40that that we're all doing
    • 33:41throughout our life.
    • 33:43And what the house really
    • 33:44illustrates I think nicely is
    • 33:46that there are the ladders
    • 33:47we want to keep moving
    • 33:48up, but sometimes we do,
    • 33:49end up down on the
    • 33:50lower floors, and when that
    • 33:52does happen we might have
    • 33:53to go back to focusing
    • 33:55on behavioral control. Right? If
    • 33:56we're doing some very intensive
    • 33:58trauma focused work, on in
    • 34:00the second stage and that's
    • 34:01causing more behavioral dysregulation, we
    • 34:03have to go back and
    • 34:03get that behavioral control to
    • 34:05continue,
    • 34:06to be able to keep
    • 34:07a cohesive
    • 34:08a cohesive treatment and moving
    • 34:09forward.
    • 34:14And lastly, in terms
    • 34:15of the of the unique
    • 34:17aspects of the treatment itself,
    • 34:18the commitment phase that I
    • 34:20think often gets overlooked,
    • 34:23that the the commitment phase
    • 34:24is the pretreatment part of
    • 34:26DBT
    • 34:27that lasts as long as
    • 34:28it needs to, and it
    • 34:29makes it very effective. It
    • 34:31also can make it a
    • 34:32a very challenging part of
    • 34:34the treatment. So the idea
    • 34:35with the commitment phase is
    • 34:37that
    • 34:38when you're entering into the
    • 34:39treatment with your client in
    • 34:40this modality, you are entering
    • 34:42into the behavioral contract of
    • 34:44what you're both committing to.
    • 34:46If somebody has any ambivalence
    • 34:47about that, you spend all
    • 34:49the time getting commitment, to
    • 34:51what behavioral change they're being
    • 34:52willing to make until that
    • 34:54until,
    • 34:55there is a commitment to
    • 34:56it. Because otherwise you can
    • 34:57throw every skill you want
    • 34:59at them. It's probably not
    • 35:00gonna be the most effective,
    • 35:02and so there's the ins
    • 35:03and outs of all the
    • 35:04different commitment strategies that we
    • 35:05might be trying to increase
    • 35:07motivation
    • 35:07to see the buy in
    • 35:09of what you can get.
    • 35:10I have absolutely with clients
    • 35:12gotten the commitment of the
    • 35:14goal to be like to
    • 35:15fire me. And if we,
    • 35:15you know, if we you
    • 35:16don't wanna see me anymore.
    • 35:17Right? Like, can we both
    • 35:18be committed
    • 35:20to getting enough behavioral control
    • 35:21to not need to do
    • 35:22therapy anymore? So we're trying
    • 35:23to find whatever nugget we
    • 35:25can to get a buy
    • 35:26in. Is it that you
    • 35:26want your parents off your
    • 35:27back? Is it that you
    • 35:28don't wanna have to keep
    • 35:29going to the hospital? Is
    • 35:30it that you do want
    • 35:31more freedom, and that then
    • 35:32you can get that commitment
    • 35:34to be working on the
    • 35:34things that maybe they're not
    • 35:36in in and of themselves,
    • 35:38motivators that might be motivators
    • 35:40for the parents or the,
    • 35:41the provider?
    • 35:44To that point, it's one
    • 35:46of the things that I
    • 35:46really appreciate of the treatment
    • 35:48itself is that it's viewed
    • 35:49as a relationship between equals,
    • 35:51and the idea that any
    • 35:52patient we have regardless of
    • 35:54age is just as much
    • 35:55of an expert in themselves
    • 35:56as we are in our
    • 35:57fields.
    • 35:59And so that that's why
    • 36:00we need to have that
    • 36:01commitment because it's not gonna
    • 36:02work if one person is
    • 36:03trying is, more invested than
    • 36:05the other. And to give
    • 36:07the analogy of you're in
    • 36:08the boat, right,
    • 36:09you don't wanna be just
    • 36:10sitting in the back seat
    • 36:11of the or the back
    • 36:12of the boat and your
    • 36:13clients having to do all
    • 36:14the work,
    • 36:15which I I think clients
    • 36:16do experience that that sometimes,
    • 36:19or have that perception and
    • 36:20it's something then to be
    • 36:21addressed.
    • 36:22But you also don't wanna
    • 36:23be if we're thinking about
    • 36:24we're trying to get them
    • 36:25to the other side of
    • 36:26the lake, which is their
    • 36:27life worth living, you don't
    • 36:28wanna be doing all the
    • 36:29rowing, and then they're drilling
    • 36:30holes in the back of
    • 36:31the boat. Right? And that's
    • 36:32an
    • 36:33analogy that we often use
    • 36:34in the commitment phase to
    • 36:36get that buy in that
    • 36:37of why we we can't
    • 36:38be the only one, driving
    • 36:39things forward.
    • 36:45Thinking about the whole treatment
    • 36:47itself and then the goals
    • 36:48and the benefits, a lot
    • 36:49of times, we think about
    • 36:51the overall goal being a
    • 36:52reduction in suicidality,
    • 36:54that DBT is
    • 36:56a treatment for life threatening
    • 36:58behaviors, for suicidality.
    • 37:00And it's not actually the
    • 37:01goal to to reduce suicidality
    • 37:03or high risk behaviors. Truly
    • 37:04the idea is building a
    • 37:05life worth living. So if
    • 37:07we're thinking instead of yes,
    • 37:08we we do wanna reduce
    • 37:10those high risk behaviors, those
    • 37:11things related to behavioral dis
    • 37:13control, but if we can
    • 37:14have life feel worth living,
    • 37:16what are we working towards?
    • 37:18That that actually gives,
    • 37:19patients
    • 37:20a much more,
    • 37:22much more something to be
    • 37:23invested in. And the benefits
    • 37:25and the way that we
    • 37:26end up getting there are
    • 37:27by enhancing emotion regulation,
    • 37:29improving relationships,
    • 37:32yes, reducing life threatening and
    • 37:33self destructive behaviors that get
    • 37:35in their way of life
    • 37:35worth living, but that not
    • 37:36being the ultimate priority, priority,
    • 37:38and then managing crises more
    • 37:39effectively that allows for an
    • 37:41increased self awareness.
    • 37:46So with the goals and
    • 37:48benefits in mind,
    • 37:49and thinking about the very
    • 37:50comprehensive treatment, one of the
    • 37:52things that often comes up
    • 37:53is what actually makes it
    • 37:54effective. We do know that
    • 37:56it's a, that there's a
    • 37:57robust evidence base for DBT
    • 37:59and we'll talk more about
    • 38:00some of the different applications
    • 38:02for it and what's been
    • 38:02effective,
    • 38:04but
    • 38:05what what makes it effective,
    • 38:06and some of the the
    • 38:08analyses that have actually looked
    • 38:09at identifying the mechanisms of
    • 38:11change have identified kind of
    • 38:13five areas that that tend
    • 38:15to to be when rated
    • 38:16tend to be tied to
    • 38:17the greatest change.
    • 38:20So first actually increasing self
    • 38:21regulation capacity, the piece of
    • 38:23actually learning the skills, skills
    • 38:24right if we're going through
    • 38:25this whole curriculum
    • 38:26learning the ability of some
    • 38:28of these different skills to
    • 38:29help with self regulating that
    • 38:30there is that actual kind
    • 38:31of skill acquisition.
    • 38:33But then second is actually
    • 38:34the skill use right. So
    • 38:36that important piece that will
    • 38:37go through the entire curriculum.
    • 38:39Is somebody actually practicing it
    • 38:41and whether or not they're
    • 38:42practicing it outside of session,
    • 38:44leads to more significant changes,
    • 38:46of course, in terms of
    • 38:47the treatment.
    • 38:49Third, very importantly, the validating
    • 38:51therapeutic environment.
    • 38:52That I think is true
    • 38:54of course across treatments but
    • 38:55the importance of the providing
    • 38:57that in this treatment of
    • 38:59especially if we're pushing for
    • 39:00changing some very life threatening
    • 39:01behaviors that it's critical to
    • 39:03have that validating environment.
    • 39:05And then fourth is that
    • 39:07commitment to the treatment
    • 39:09they do not they find
    • 39:09it is not effective unless
    • 39:11somebody has engaged in the
    • 39:13commitment phase and is, that
    • 39:14there is something that they're
    • 39:15bought in to be working
    • 39:16towards.
    • 39:18And then lastly, the structure
    • 39:20of the sessions themselves.
    • 39:22So when we were talking
    • 39:23about those different stages of
    • 39:24treatment that the the
    • 39:26treatment itself actually sets up
    • 39:28a hierarchy of targets. Right?
    • 39:29And so your first targets
    • 39:31are always going to be
    • 39:31if there's like threatening behaviors
    • 39:33And that that has to
    • 39:34that we have to focus
    • 39:35on those followed by anything
    • 39:37that interferes with treatment before
    • 39:38we even get into quality
    • 39:39of life. And that providing
    • 39:41that structure,
    • 39:42and those guardrails to moving
    • 39:44forward actually allows patients to,
    • 39:46again, continue to engage even
    • 39:48when there might be things
    • 39:49that feel like higher priorities
    • 39:51to them.
    • 39:57When thinking about,
    • 39:58where DBT has actually been
    • 40:00effective, the positive is that
    • 40:02it's been found to have
    • 40:03an evidence base across different
    • 40:04presentations of dysregulation,
    • 40:07so we do see in
    • 40:08terms of the research the
    • 40:10the evidence base of it
    • 40:12reducing
    • 40:14experiences of suicidality and action
    • 40:16on self harm.
    • 40:17There has also been the
    • 40:18research particularly
    • 40:19in patients with,
    • 40:21diagnoses of borderline personality disorder
    • 40:23of reduced hospitalizations,
    • 40:25related to suicidality or other
    • 40:27high risk behaviors,
    • 40:28and so in that way
    • 40:30actually ends up
    • 40:31despite the cost of the
    • 40:32treatment itself being a cost
    • 40:34saver for the systems
    • 40:36of just mood lability
    • 40:38in general, and so when
    • 40:40we think about again what
    • 40:41BPD tendencies might look like
    • 40:42across the developmental
    • 40:43spectrum.
    • 40:45For depression and other mood
    • 40:46disorders including bipolar disorder in
    • 40:48terms of reduction again in
    • 40:50high risk behaviors
    • 40:51and as well as,
    • 40:53the hospitalizations
    • 40:55associated,
    • 40:56and depress and ratings of
    • 40:58depression,
    • 40:59for anxiety disorders, for substance
    • 41:01use disorders.
    • 41:03For eating disorders, predominantly
    • 41:05those of, dysregulation, so we're
    • 41:07thinking more bulimia and binge
    • 41:09eating.
    • 41:10There's as a plug a
    • 41:12DBT flipped on its head
    • 41:13called radically open DBT that's
    • 41:15used more for, over control
    • 41:16presentations like anorexia.
    • 41:19But then traditional DBT also
    • 41:20being effective with impulsivity and
    • 41:22ADHD
    • 41:23as well, and some research
    • 41:25most recently on ADHD
    • 41:27and then in, presentations of
    • 41:29PTSD as well.
    • 41:31But underlying all of these
    • 41:32are the emotional and behavioral
    • 41:34dysregulation,
    • 41:35which is where actually the
    • 41:37workbook,
    • 41:38that that is often used
    • 41:40it has been adapted for
    • 41:41the idea of the complex
    • 41:42PTSD as well. So if
    • 41:43we're understanding
    • 41:45how,
    • 41:46some experiences of having,
    • 41:49some complex trauma in our
    • 41:50life may lead to emotional
    • 41:51or behavioral dysregulation
    • 41:53how then we can still
    • 41:54build a life worth living.
    • 41:58So importantly to that point,
    • 42:00I did just wanna highlight
    • 42:01one of the things that
    • 42:01often comes up in the
    • 42:02the work with the CPTSD
    • 42:04is the how that actually
    • 42:05looks like borderline tendencies in
    • 42:07and of themselves,
    • 42:08but where the treatment regardless
    • 42:10of what we call it
    • 42:11or what the diagnosis is
    • 42:12where the where it can
    • 42:13still be effective for that
    • 42:15transdiagnostic
    • 42:16application.
    • 42:17So when we're thinking truly
    • 42:18but about like DSM criteria
    • 42:20with borderline,
    • 42:21we're thinking about that unstable
    • 42:22sense of self, unstable relationships,
    • 42:25impulsive behaviors, fear of abandonment,
    • 42:27the chronic sense of emptiness.
    • 42:29Those with experiences of complex
    • 42:31trauma have some similar kind
    • 42:33of overlap in symptoms. They
    • 42:34have negative views of sense
    • 42:35of self, a difficulty trusting
    • 42:37others, They have a hyper
    • 42:38vigilance, often and intrusive
    • 42:40thoughts that need to be
    • 42:41addressed as well as the
    • 42:42loss of their own belief
    • 42:43system.
    • 42:44And with these overlaps we
    • 42:45still see avoidant and impulsive
    • 42:47behaviors, difficulties, regulating emotions,
    • 42:50depression, anxiety, and anger, and
    • 42:52trauma, and all things that
    • 42:53the the treatment can target.
    • 42:55So it's often we get
    • 42:56away from what is diagnostically
    • 42:57going on, is there dysregulation
    • 42:59happening, is there something that
    • 43:00we need to target towards
    • 43:01a life worth living.
    • 43:05And so to that point,
    • 43:06thinking about the applications across
    • 43:08levels of care,
    • 43:10while the treatment itself was
    • 43:11originally developed outpatient, it has
    • 43:13been, used and adapted at,
    • 43:16in inpatient modalities, residential, and
    • 43:18PHPs, and IOPs. So often
    • 43:20they're adapting how we're teaching
    • 43:21the skill curriculum in a
    • 43:23truncated way. That was my
    • 43:24first experience in grad school
    • 43:26was working at a a
    • 43:27DBT adherent PHP program,
    • 43:29and and then thinking about
    • 43:31how that that carried over
    • 43:32into outpatient work.
    • 43:35The gold standard being, again,
    • 43:36the the comprehensive outpatient treatment,
    • 43:38which if you think about
    • 43:39is more like three to
    • 43:40four contact hours a week,
    • 43:42so more than traditional just,
    • 43:43weekly outpatient.
    • 43:45And then the lower levels
    • 43:46of care, DBT informed outpatient.
    • 43:48How are we pulling some
    • 43:49of this work into weekly
    • 43:51therapy?
    • 43:52Skills training only. So just
    • 43:54focusing on on equipping folks
    • 43:56with learning, the skills related
    • 43:58to self regulation.
    • 44:00And actually that's the work
    • 44:01that's been done in SEL
    • 44:02curriculum in school. And so
    • 44:04some trainings that that I've
    • 44:06done with some of our
    • 44:06local schools here in Connecticut
    • 44:09as well as in, New
    • 44:10York. And the this one
    • 44:12on the right just recently
    • 44:13came out for elementary schools.
    • 44:15The the one on the
    • 44:16left, the steps a, has
    • 44:17been, used the the last
    • 44:19few years, and the idea
    • 44:21being that this is just
    • 44:22as important to one's kind
    • 44:24of health curriculum than anything
    • 44:26else. Right? And so if
    • 44:27we're learning throughout the education
    • 44:29how to
    • 44:31be mindful, how to tolerate
    • 44:32distress, how to regulate emotions
    • 44:34and be interpersonally effective that
    • 44:36that can really change trajectory.
    • 44:43So thinking about then how
    • 44:45the comprehensive
    • 44:46treatment itself varies from what
    • 44:48might be some of the
    • 44:49lower levels of care or
    • 44:50just informed models,
    • 44:52the adherent model for it
    • 44:54to
    • 44:55truly be DBT is recommended
    • 44:57for the higher risk presentations.
    • 44:59All four modes are required.
    • 45:01So the individual therapy, separate
    • 45:03skills training, consulting for the
    • 45:05therapist, and intersession coaching.
    • 45:08To the point of the
    • 45:09commitment, it requires a commitment
    • 45:10of at least six months.
    • 45:11Now you may spend months
    • 45:13even in that that pretreatment
    • 45:15commitment phase first, and it's
    • 45:16the most effective, right, because
    • 45:18we're having, the
    • 45:19having it tied in, and
    • 45:21and having that buy in.
    • 45:24DBT informed treatment can be
    • 45:25appropriate for patients with less
    • 45:27severe presentations. It incorporates some
    • 45:29but not all,
    • 45:30components, and there's no specific
    • 45:32time commitment,
    • 45:33but it still helps with
    • 45:35relationships and coaching. Right? And
    • 45:36so if you don't have
    • 45:37that commitment and buy in
    • 45:38there's still the ways to
    • 45:39bring in some of these
    • 45:40really evidence informed kind of
    • 45:42pieces to, to help it
    • 45:44be most effective for patients.
    • 45:48And so thinking about the
    • 45:49relevance for today's youth,
    • 45:51and and why I've continued
    • 45:53to have a passion for
    • 45:54I think the treatment approach
    • 45:55itself
    • 45:56is its effectiveness for patients
    • 45:58with higher risk presentations
    • 45:59are,
    • 46:01we continue to see the
    • 46:02complexity of youth mental health
    • 46:05increasing, right? We're continuing to
    • 46:06see an increase in the
    • 46:07severity of presentations. We've seen
    • 46:08that since pre pandemic,
    • 46:10but especially now and and
    • 46:11with the evolving
    • 46:13escalations in our world and
    • 46:14the complexity of what our
    • 46:15our youth are are having
    • 46:17to navigate.
    • 46:19That it allows us to
    • 46:20to, again, address mood lability
    • 46:22and dysregulation
    • 46:23transdiagnostically,
    • 46:25and that that can hit
    • 46:26be helpful for a number
    • 46:27of presentations
    • 46:28and the idea of learning
    • 46:30how to effectively regulate your
    • 46:31emotions benefits all of us.
    • 46:34I always I always say
    • 46:35that it's,
    • 46:37it's humbling to teach the
    • 46:39skills themselves because I always
    • 46:40catch myself of, like, I
    • 46:42didn't do that this week.
    • 46:43Right? Like, of any of
    • 46:43the skill that I'm teaching,
    • 46:44so it's always helpful for
    • 46:45any of us to to
    • 46:46revisit and to to bolster
    • 46:48those skills.
    • 46:50The greater understanding of the
    • 46:51nuances of a history of
    • 46:53complex trauma, right, whether there
    • 46:54is trauma with a capital
    • 46:55t, in somebody's history or
    • 46:57more experience with that chronic
    • 46:59invalidation
    • 47:00and how that may lead
    • 47:01to presentations of dysregulation
    • 47:03throughout one's life developmentally.
    • 47:07Relevance of the importance of
    • 47:08the systems perspective.
    • 47:10It is one of the
    • 47:11treatment approaches that I I
    • 47:13do think lends well with
    • 47:14when we're thinking about how
    • 47:15do we address both the
    • 47:16system and for the individual
    • 47:17so that we can teach
    • 47:19youth again learning these skills
    • 47:20to self regulate and work
    • 47:22with the families on creating
    • 47:23a more validating environment.
    • 47:27That there's some very unique
    • 47:28skill deficits with, today's youth
    • 47:30when we're thinking about how
    • 47:32they're growing up on phones
    • 47:33and with screens and things
    • 47:34of that some of the
    • 47:35challenges with mindfulness and some
    • 47:37inabilities to tolerate distress,
    • 47:39or to spend time away
    • 47:40from more stimulating activities and
    • 47:42that those are really important
    • 47:44skills to be bolstering.
    • 47:45And then to that point
    • 47:46that there's this really just
    • 47:48kind of chronically mismatch with
    • 47:50the environment. Right? Today's youth
    • 47:51grow up in a completely
    • 47:52different context than any of
    • 47:54us. Right? And and what
    • 47:55it's like developmentally
    • 47:56to to have the screen
    • 47:58so available, social media, all
    • 47:59of these things. And so
    • 48:01there is this inherent kind
    • 48:02of mismatch with the environment,
    • 48:04and learning to effectively regulate
    • 48:06any of the big feelings
    • 48:07about that being so important.
    • 48:11Thinking about the barriers themselves,
    • 48:14there's a number despite it
    • 48:15being a wonderful treatment.
    • 48:17There's a a number that
    • 48:19we that we'll hit on
    • 48:20of just what can get
    • 48:21in the way of the
    • 48:21implementation
    • 48:22and one, paper that I
    • 48:24put out with Andres, actually,
    • 48:25just as a clinical perspective
    • 48:27a couple years ago about
    • 48:28some of the barriers to
    • 48:29accessing,
    • 48:30DBT
    • 48:31especially among youth with experiences
    • 48:33of racism,
    • 48:34and what we highlight in
    • 48:35the article,
    • 48:36kind of transcends
    • 48:37just that specific population, but
    • 48:39what makes it a barrier
    • 48:40of,
    • 48:41to to be implementing this
    • 48:42more comprehensive treatment
    • 48:44of the cost of the
    • 48:46training and the treatment in
    • 48:47terms of both time and
    • 48:48financially. Right? It takes a
    • 48:50long time to be trained
    • 48:50in a very comprehensive treatment.
    • 48:53The multi component nature of
    • 48:54it, it's a lot to
    • 48:56ask families to commit to,
    • 48:57like, four hours a week
    • 48:58in a sense. Right? That
    • 48:59you have to have skills
    • 49:00group and individual therapy and
    • 49:02the buy in. So it's
    • 49:03also what why it's what
    • 49:04makes it effective. It also
    • 49:06causes barriers.
    • 49:08One of the big issues
    • 49:09insurance wise is that there's
    • 49:11a lot of components that
    • 49:12aren't covered, financially and why
    • 49:14often DBT is done in
    • 49:15private pay settings,
    • 49:16because while you will get,
    • 49:18of course, you we'd all
    • 49:20know the CPT codes for
    • 49:21individual therapy.
    • 49:23There are no CPT codes
    • 49:24for phone coaching or consult
    • 49:25team which are a crucial
    • 49:26part,
    • 49:27component of the treatment. And
    • 49:29then also skills training,
    • 49:31receives very low reimbursement,
    • 49:33rates. And it's often a
    • 49:34a conversation on on the
    • 49:35DBT listservs of what to
    • 49:37do about that especially at
    • 49:38mental health clinics.
    • 49:41What is required in terms
    • 49:42of for adherence is a
    • 49:43lot, in order to become
    • 49:45an adherently trained,
    • 49:46provider and that there's then
    • 49:48understandable
    • 49:49discomfort and fear withholding higher
    • 49:51risk patients at a lower
    • 49:52level of, of care, especially
    • 49:54one that's been a different
    • 49:55way of navigating high risk
    • 49:56behaviors than than one may
    • 49:57traditionally be used to. And
    • 49:59then the burnout,
    • 50:00working with high risk patients,
    • 50:02it can be burnout inducing.
    • 50:04Interestingly, so there's been some
    • 50:06research on four patients working
    • 50:07with suicidal,
    • 50:09patients for providers working with
    • 50:11suicidal patients that being trained
    • 50:13in DBT reduces burnout, but
    • 50:14just working with that population
    • 50:16in general, is burnout inducing.
    • 50:20And so where we go
    • 50:21from here,
    • 50:22and and
    • 50:23even with thinking about all
    • 50:24those barriers, but we're kind
    • 50:26of hoping to go,
    • 50:27thinking about some of the
    • 50:28efforts that made with colleagues
    • 50:30here at the Child Study
    • 50:32Center.
    • 50:33In terms of clinically,
    • 50:35in the past past we've
    • 50:36worked with Michelle and we've
    • 50:37had outpatient skills groups. I
    • 50:39don't believe any currently running
    • 50:40but we had though weren't
    • 50:41able to do multifamily. We've
    • 50:43tried both having the teen
    • 50:44and parent equivalent, even doing
    • 50:46single drop in, skill session
    • 50:47groups.
    • 50:49Laurie and I had worked
    • 50:50on doing some DBT informed
    • 50:52skills training on the inpatient
    • 50:53unit, and we thought about
    • 50:54the to that point co
    • 50:55facilitation by fellows to be
    • 50:57learning about some of the
    • 50:58skills, in the clinical implementation.
    • 51:01We continue to have skills
    • 51:02seminars.
    • 51:03So we have an ongoing
    • 51:05seminar right now that I
    • 51:06teach with our fellows on
    • 51:07Friday afternoons for anybody who
    • 51:08wants to join, on the
    • 51:10skills curriculum, and we, do
    • 51:12that with, some of the
    • 51:13the clinical,
    • 51:15faculty as well, and successfully
    • 51:15did that last spring and
    • 51:15something that there's been a
    • 51:15lot of interest in in
    • 51:15having ongoing.
    • 51:17Something that there's been a
    • 51:19lot of interest in in
    • 51:20having ongoing and then some
    • 51:21individual supervision
    • 51:22and mentorship in the area.
    • 51:25And then in terms of
    • 51:26thinking about how we enter
    • 51:28or have integrated this in
    • 51:29into the research,
    • 51:30working with our high risk
    • 51:31populations in the interventional
    • 51:33psychiatry and treatment resistant depression
    • 51:35team,
    • 51:36and where some of the
    • 51:37the skill components come in
    • 51:38there, and also some of
    • 51:40the game based research,
    • 51:42that actually with some of
    • 51:43our colleagues in pediatrics,
    • 51:45Deepa and Kim, who I
    • 51:46know many of the folks
    • 51:47here know, and the VR
    • 51:48team,
    • 51:49recently got a a r
    • 51:51o one, specifically on smoking
    • 51:53cessation,
    • 51:54that we're actually doing DBT
    • 51:56skills and and teaching,
    • 51:57youth,
    • 51:58DBT skills as a way
    • 52:00of regulating emotions to prevent,
    • 52:02any substance use.
    • 52:05So in terms of the
    • 52:05future directions for there, hoping
    • 52:07that there will continue to
    • 52:08be opportunities
    • 52:10for additional DBT and DBT
    • 52:11informed programming.
    • 52:13I think our best way
    • 52:14into that is by trying
    • 52:15to figure out how do
    • 52:16we latch on to those
    • 52:17mechanisms of change, right? There's
    • 52:18so many pieces to the
    • 52:20treatment, but how do we
    • 52:21really latch on to to
    • 52:22what we know is effective?
    • 52:24Opportunities for more teaching and
    • 52:26training, more, more seminars. I'm
    • 52:28always happy to talk with
    • 52:29folks about any interest in
    • 52:30those. The into continual integration
    • 52:33into some of our research
    • 52:34trials and partnerships both with
    • 52:36our colleagues in the department
    • 52:37department of psychiatry with the
    • 52:39the formal DBT program as
    • 52:41well as at other sites.
    • 52:52Yeah. Any questions?
    • 53:03Hello? We have time for
    • 53:05questions. Laurie.
    • 53:10Thank you for that exceptional
    • 53:12overview.
    • 53:12So inspiring, particularly in the
    • 53:14end when you talk about
    • 53:15its applications
    • 53:16across diagnostic groups and settings
    • 53:18and research.
    • 53:19It occurs to me that
    • 53:21if you are a beginning
    • 53:22student
    • 53:23of DBT,
    • 53:25that in some ways, there
    • 53:26are already tenants philosophical tenants
    • 53:29that you can draw upon.
    • 53:30And so could you talk
    • 53:32about
    • 53:32the cousins
    • 53:33of
    • 53:34MI
    • 53:36and ACT and just,
    • 53:37CBT?
    • 53:40It seems to me that
    • 53:41if you can integrate
    • 53:43all those philosophies,
    • 53:45you're well on your way
    • 53:46of DBT dumb, but maybe
    • 53:49I am seeing it too
    • 53:50simplistically.
    • 53:52No. I think it's a
    • 53:53great point, Laurie. And that's
    • 53:54where I think that the
    • 53:55treatment itself pulls from a
    • 53:57lot of these areas. Right?
    • 53:58And anybody who's been in
    • 53:59a seminar with me, especially
    • 54:00with the skills, they'll say
    • 54:01these skills aren't really unique
    • 54:03to DBT. Right? It's the
    • 54:04packaging that we might be
    • 54:05pulling from from a lot
    • 54:06of these different,
    • 54:08treatment modalities and the philosophical
    • 54:10underpinnings
    • 54:11that as you're saying, if
    • 54:11we can start to pull
    • 54:12on those parts that are
    • 54:13effective, right, change based strategies
    • 54:15and learning ways to self
    • 54:16regulate is a mechanism of
    • 54:17change. Creating a validating environment
    • 54:20is effective and is something
    • 54:21that is important in a
    • 54:23number of our treatment modalities.
    • 54:24The piece of creating the
    • 54:26validating environment at home and
    • 54:27the mentalization for parents, right,
    • 54:29is an evidence based approach.
    • 54:30And
    • 54:31while this is the packaging,
    • 54:32right, in a very kind
    • 54:33of synthesized way, that is
    • 54:35something that we can really
    • 54:36build on from other approaches
    • 54:38that they may be trained
    • 54:39in.
    • 54:41Next question, doctor Pius.
    • 54:43Thank you for the presentation.
    • 54:45My question is more along
    • 54:46the lines of the coaching
    • 54:48or the crisis line ish,
    • 54:50approach of the the gold
    • 54:51standard of care. Do you
    • 54:53know or have you experienced
    • 54:54with, like, the use of
    • 54:55chatbots
    • 54:56or AI aided, you know,
    • 54:58kind of like or text
    • 55:00based kind of,
    • 55:02coaching sessions, for this population?
    • 55:04It's a great question and
    • 55:06very controversial one. I think
    • 55:07in terms of because there
    • 55:08there have been, you know,
    • 55:09a number of those articles
    • 55:10put out there of some
    • 55:11of the dangers that happen
    • 55:13with it.
    • 55:14The the biggest challenge that
    • 55:15I've seen in my understanding
    • 55:17with it is that while
    • 55:18the chatbots can give very
    • 55:20direct skills to you. So
    • 55:21if we have a patient
    • 55:22who says I really need
    • 55:23to tolerate distress, can you
    • 55:25give me ideas for it?
    • 55:26They're not as good as
    • 55:27picking up the,
    • 55:29some of the nuances of
    • 55:30more high risk language. Right?
    • 55:31And that is something that
    • 55:32is part of the coaching
    • 55:33call while you're trying to
    • 55:35keep it very directed and
    • 55:36time sensitive. If somebody is
    • 55:37in in immediate harm, we
    • 55:39have to act, and it's
    • 55:40something the chatbot just can't
    • 55:41do effectively yet.
    • 55:43Rebecca, we have, more questions,
    • 55:44but we have one from
    • 55:45Zoom and then one from
    • 55:46doctor Block. So doctor Stover,
    • 55:48I don't know if you
    • 55:49can hear us, or do
    • 55:49you wanna you're gonna be
    • 55:50the ventriloquist for doctor Stover.
    • 55:52Sure. I can Cara, if
    • 55:53you want to unmute, please
    • 55:54do. Yeah. I'm not sure
    • 55:56if you Otherwise, Carla's
    • 55:57Can you hear me?
    • 55:59Can we turn the volume
    • 56:00up on
    • 56:01Sorry. I couldn't be there
    • 56:02in person, but I Just
    • 56:03one moment, Carla. We're gonna
    • 56:04turn the volume up so
    • 56:05we can hear you properly.
    • 56:09Hello, Carla?
    • 56:10Hello. Sorry. I didn't wanna
    • 56:12brave the rain from George
    • 56:13Street.
    • 56:16I I I saw Rebecca,
    • 56:17I was really interested in
    • 56:18this talk, and I saw
    • 56:19that that you said that
    • 56:20there are DBT skills groups
    • 56:22that have been run at
    • 56:23the child study center.
    • 56:25But it sounds like no
    • 56:26one is delivering DBT
    • 56:28fully. Is that accurate? Because
    • 56:30it seems like it would
    • 56:31be difficult to carry out
    • 56:33because of the reimbursement
    • 56:34issues for some parts.
    • 56:36So do you
    • 56:38related to that, are there
    • 56:39policy efforts,
    • 56:41underway related to reimbursement for
    • 56:43this kind of model given
    • 56:44the the evidence base?
    • 56:48Yeah. It's it's a great
    • 56:49question, Carla. And, yes, we've
    • 56:50we've done the skills group
    • 56:51at the Child Study Center.
    • 56:52We haven't for the reasons
    • 56:53that you're saying, but there's
    • 56:55not the infrastructure, right, especially
    • 56:56in a child guidance clinic,
    • 56:58unfortunately.
    • 56:59There are efforts to actually
    • 57:01and and some, policy work
    • 57:03that is being done by
    • 57:04the DBT community of submitting
    • 57:06at the different
    • 57:07kind of state levels. So
    • 57:08both in Connecticut and New
    • 57:09York of getting reimbursement
    • 57:11for some of those other
    • 57:12critical pieces,
    • 57:14starting with just having higher
    • 57:15reimbursement rates for
    • 57:17the skills training groups. Right.
    • 57:19And more adequate kind of
    • 57:20reimbursement for that. And then
    • 57:22if there's more structured ways
    • 57:23that we can build on
    • 57:24things like case management codes
    • 57:25to to be able to
    • 57:26cover things like phone coaching,
    • 57:28or even things like consult
    • 57:30team, I think that one's
    • 57:31gonna be a big ask.
    • 57:32But but some efforts that
    • 57:33haven't been successful yet, but
    • 57:35we'll keep trying.
    • 57:37Thank you.
    • 57:38Last,
    • 57:40I think last question is
    • 57:41gonna come from doctor Block,
    • 57:43but, doctor Kamadhi is gonna
    • 57:44be giving autographs afterwards.
    • 57:46I I should just note
    • 57:47that we peaked at seventy
    • 57:48something people, so plus these
    • 57:50thirty ish people. There were
    • 57:51about a hundred people,
    • 57:52which is high for us,
    • 57:53which is a reflection of
    • 57:54the interest in the topic
    • 57:55and how what a wonderful
    • 57:56job you did. But, your
    • 57:57partner in crime, doctor Block.
    • 57:59So,
    • 58:00two part question so you
    • 58:02can pick, which part to
    • 58:03talk if you want to.
    • 58:05I guess I just want
    • 58:06to hear a little bit
    • 58:06more about your past experiences
    • 58:08running the outpatient DBT groups
    • 58:11here.
    • 58:12And then, also, if you
    • 58:13could just touch on the
    • 58:15idea of using sort of,
    • 58:17delivering them virtually and whether
    • 58:18that's something that's evidence based
    • 58:20or makes sense.
    • 58:22Yeah. I kinda see this
    • 58:23one kind of a both
    • 58:24end. I will say that
    • 58:25question.
    • 58:26Because the the skills group
    • 58:27we did here was primarily
    • 58:28virtual, so we had done
    • 58:29them in person pre pandemic
    • 58:31and then, virtually afterwards.
    • 58:34It allows more accessibility but
    • 58:36it is less effective in
    • 58:37terms of the engagement, right,
    • 58:38is that patient if you're
    • 58:39thinking about patients who might
    • 58:40want to be avoidant, hard
    • 58:41time getting them on the
    • 58:43screen of addressing any like
    • 58:44group interfering behaviors in that
    • 58:46way so it's harder to
    • 58:47manage.
    • 58:49We did have a higher
    • 58:50census when it was, virtually
    • 58:52than than when we were
    • 58:53doing it in person,
    • 58:55but it it does make
    • 58:55it much much more challenging
    • 58:57especially when you have higher
    • 58:58risk behaviors that are happening.
    • 59:01And we had also in
    • 59:02terms of increasing
    • 59:03accessibility at the when we
    • 59:04were doing the group's outpatient,
    • 59:06didn't require the commitment to
    • 59:07the full six month curriculum,
    • 59:08so it was more of
    • 59:09a drop in. But we
    • 59:10did have more parents involved
    • 59:12in the parent group as
    • 59:13well, so it was a
    • 59:14nice to be able to
    • 59:15to generalize there as well.
    • 59:17So Again, sorry we don't
    • 59:18have time for, more questions,
    • 59:19but please comment up if
    • 59:20you have questions, and please
    • 59:21join me in thanking doctor
    • 59:22Kamedy.