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1.
Psychol Serv ; 20(3): 697-707, 2023 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35420859

ABSTRACT

The perinatal period (pregnancy and the first-year postpartum) is a time of increased vulnerability to mental health difficulties including emotion dysregulation. Research conducted on treatments targeting emotion dysregulation during this time is limited. Dialectical behavioral therapy (DBT) skills groups are considered the gold standard for targeting emotion dysregulation. We developed and evaluated the effectiveness of a seven-session DBT informed skills group (perinatal emotion regulation skills [Peri-ERS]) tailored to meet the unique emotion dysregulation experienced by women within the perinatal period. N = 41 perinatal women participated in the Peri-ERS group within the Women's Health Concern's Clinic, St. Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton. Participants completed a semistructured assessment to determine eligibility. They completed self-report symptom measures at baseline, Sessions 1-6, and posttreatment assessments. Paired-samples t tests, Cohen's d, and Friedman's rank tests were run to examine change over time. Reliable and clinical change index (RCI) analysis was conducted on emotion dysregulation. Participants demonstrated significant improvements in all symptom domain measures. Forty-eight percent of participants exhibited reliable clinical change on emotion dysregulation. These findings suggest the Peri-ERS group is effective in reducing emotion dysregulation symptoms for perinatal women. These results are promising as this novel treatment addresses a gap in the literature and may potentially be implemented in women's health clinics as a way of improving overall perinatal care. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).


Subject(s)
Behavior Therapy , Mental Health , Humans , Female , Pilot Projects , Behavior Therapy/methods , Emotions , Treatment Outcome
2.
J Can Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry ; 29(3): 132-148, 2020 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32774397

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: New approaches are needed to help the large number of emerging adults (EA) presenting with early-stage mental health problems. The goal of this pilot study was to carry out a randomized controlled trial to investigate whether motivational enhancement therapy (MET) improved the treatment effects of a 12-week psychological intervention, Dialectical Behaviour Therapy Skills Training (DBT-ST), for EA presenting in the early stages of mental health difficulties. Participants were recruited from the Youth Wellness Centre at St. Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton and McMaster University's Student Wellness Centre in Hamilton, Canada. METHODS: Seventy-five participants were randomized to receive MET followed by DBT-ST or to DBT-ST alone. We assessed psychological distress, emotion dysregulation, and depression and anxiety symptoms as outcomes. RESULTS: We found that both treatment groups had significant reductions in emotional dysregulation, psychological distress, depression, and anxiety at post-treatment and at the three-month follow-up. Participants assigned to MET pre-treatment experienced greater improvement in psychological distress at the end of treatment. CONCLUSION: This pilot study provides preliminary evidence of the potential augmentation of DBT-ST using MET in a real-world setting. Future studies should examine whether MET uniquely augments DBT-ST through the use of a comparable pre-treatment control group.


OBJECTIF: De nouvelles approches sont nécessaires pour aider le grand nombre d'adultes émergeants (AE) qui présentent des problèmes de santé mentale au stade précoce. La présente étude pilote avait pour but d'exécuter un essai randomisé contrôlé afin de rechercher si la thérapie d'amélioration motivationnelle (TAM) améliorait les effets du traitement d'une intervention psychologique de 12 semaines, soit la formation technique à la thérapie comportementale dialectique (FT-TCD), pour les AE qui présentent les premiers stades de difficultés de santé mentale. Les participants ont été recrutés au centre Youth Wellness de St. Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton et au centre Student Wellness de l'Université McMaster, à Hamilton, Canada. MÉTHODES: Soixante-quinze participants ont reçu au hasard la TAM suivie de la FT-TCD ou uniquement la FT-TCD. Nous avons évalué la détresse psychologique, la dérégulation émotionnelle, et les symptômes dépressifs et anxieux comme résultats. RÉSULTATS: Nous avons constaté que les deux groupes du traitement avaient des réductions significatives de la dérégulation émotionnelle, de la détresse psychologique, de la dépression et de l'anxiété au post-traitement et au suivi de 3 mois. Les participants affectés à la TAM de prétraitement ont eu une plus grande amélioration de la détresse psychologique en fin de traitement. CONCLUSION: Cette étude pilote offre des données probantes préliminaires de l'augmentation potentielle de la FT-TCD utilisant la TAM dans une situation réelle. Les futures études devraient examiner si la TAM n'augmente seulement la FT-TCD que par le recours à un groupe témoin prétraitement comparable.

3.
J Psychother Integr ; 28(1): 60-76, 2018 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29805243

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The alliance been recognized as an essential common factor and robust predictor of outcome. The present study sought to further our knowledge of the alliance and to promote the integration of research and practice by assessing consensus among peer-nominated expert therapists of varying theoretical orientations on the effectiveness of clinical strategies to repair alliance ruptures. METHOD: This study drew on the behavioral-analytic model (Goldfried & D'Zurilla, 1969) and the methodology of the Expert Consensus Guideline Series (Frances, Docherty, & Kahn 1997). In Phase I, 69 therapists submitted clinical situations describing alliance ruptures. In Phase II, 177 therapists generated responses to the situations, and clinical strategies underlying the responses were identified. In Phase III, 134 peer-nominated experts (a mean of 22.3 therapists per situation) rated the effectiveness of these clinical strategies. RESULTS: The experts reached consensus on the use of strategies that validated the client's experience and explored the rupture during the rupture session. Change-oriented interventions (e.g., changing interpersonal interactions; highlighting patterns of behavior, thought, or emotions) were generally rated as less effective to use during the rupture, but effective for use in future sessions. CONCLUSIONS: The findings are consistent with the growing literature on the value of using certain alliance-focused interventions during a rupture. The findings point to the importance of therapists' awareness of the state of the alliance so that they can identify when ruptures are occurring.

4.
J Fam Psychol ; 27(3): 518-24, 2013 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23750533

ABSTRACT

The current study examined the relationship between borderline personality disorder (BPD) features and appraisals of daily romantic relationship experiences. The sample included 114 ethnically diverse, young adult dating couples (total N = 228). Participants completed a 14-day daily diary study and reported negative impact and emotional loss to their romantic partner in response to daily positive and negative self-initiated and partner-initiated romantic experiences. Results indicated that BPD features, even when controlling for relationship satisfaction, total number of relationship experiences, and depressive symptoms, were associated with reporting greater negative impact and greater emotional loss to both partner-initiated negative and positive experiences. BPD features were generally not associated with reporting greater negative impact and emotional loss in response to self-initiated negative and positive experiences. The results suggest that individuals with BPD features have a negative interpretation bias to both negative and positive experiences and the effect is generally specific to partner-initiated experiences. Negative appraisals may be one mechanism underlying interpersonal dysfunction in those with BPD features and interventions that directly assess and target these cognitive biases may help improve individual well-being and overall couple functioning.


Subject(s)
Borderline Personality Disorder/psychology , Emotions/physiology , Interpersonal Relations , Sexual Partners/psychology , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Young Adult
5.
J Consult Clin Psychol ; 78(2): 212-24, 2010 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20350032

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Research that identifies areas of agreement among expert therapists can complement findings from clinical trials by highlighting common practices as well as innovations. The present study accessed consensus among expert therapists on the effectiveness of clinical strategies for treating young adults experiencing interpersonal problems with their parents. METHOD: This study drew on the behavioral-analytic model (Goldfried & D'Zurilla, 1969) and the methodology of the Expert Consensus Guideline Series (Frances, Kahn, Carpenter, Ross, & Docherty, 1996). In Phase I, 54 therapists (mean age = 60.32 years; 55.6% women, 44.4% men; 96.3% White/European American) provided clinical situations involving young adult clients and their parents. In Phase II, 171 therapists (mean age = 59.45 years; 47.4% women, 52.0% men; 91.8% White/European American) proposed responses to the situations, and more general clinical strategies underlying the responses were identified. In Phase III, 134 peer-nominated expert therapists (a mean of 22.33 therapists per situation; mean age = 55.46 years; 61.2% women, 34.3% men; 91.0% White/European American) rated the effectiveness of these clinical strategies. RESULTS: Results indicated that the experts reached consensus on strategies rated as highly effective; in particular, they agreed on the value of exploring clients' emotional experience and providing validation. Participants reached greater agreement on strategies for use in future sessions than strategies for immediate use. Exploratory analyses revealed correlations between experts' theoretical orientations and their ratings. CONCLUSIONS: The findings provide converging evidence of the value of exploring emotions and validating clients and, further, demonstrate the feasibility of this method for accessing clinicians' experience.


Subject(s)
Consensus , Interpersonal Relations , Parent-Child Relations , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Young Adult
6.
Psychotherapy (Chic) ; 43(1): 32-49, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22121958

ABSTRACT

Psychotherapy research concerning lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) individuals has focused on matching clients on gender and sexual orientation, yet has not considered how factors such as therapeutic skill, presenting problem, and cohort membership may influence preference for therapists. This study was designed to identify those therapist qualities that sexual-minority individuals prefer and to determine how the presenting problem influences therapist choice. Forty-two nonheterosexual adults between 18 and 29 years old ranked 63 therapist characteristics from "Extremely Uncharacteristic" to "Extremely Characteristic" when seeking treatment for a problem in which their sexual orientation was salient and one in which it was not. The analyses of both conditions yielded clusters of items reflecting therapist characteristics that participants considered unfavorable, neutral, beneficial, and essential. Participants valued therapists who had LGB-specific knowledge as well as general therapeutic skills, whereas they indicated that they would avoid therapists who held heterocentric views. Application of these findings to clinical practice and future directions are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved).

7.
J Clin Psychol ; 59(5): 555-68, 2003 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12696131

ABSTRACT

Although cognitive-behavior therapy emphasizes between-session change, therapist self-disclosure within the session can be an effective tool for strengthening the therapeutic bond and facilitating client change. After noting the use of self-disclosure in other theoretical orientations, we place self-disclosure in the context of cognitive-behavioral theories of reinforcement and modeling. Clinical vignettes illustrate the use of therapist self-disclosure to provide feedback on the interpersonal impact made by the client, enhance positive expectations and motivation, strengthen the therapeutic bond, normalize the client's reaction, reduce the client's fears, and model an effective way of functioning. Therapists need to observe appropriate boundaries when self-disclosing, and in particular, should consider their own motivations for self-disclosing. Although more research is needed on the effects of self-disclosure, cognitive-behavior therapists have found that self-disclosure can be a powerful intervention.


Subject(s)
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy/methods , Professional-Patient Relations , Self Disclosure , Feedback , Humans , Motivation
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