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1.
Autism Adulthood ; 6(1): 1-8, 2024 Mar 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38435330

RESUMO

Autistic people may experience high emotion and sensory sensitivities and a slow return to baseline emotional state. Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) was developed to address reactivity, impulsivity, and mood dysregulation in individuals with mood and personality disorders. DBT may be therapeutically beneficial to autistic individuals struggling with these or similar emotional and sensory challenges. This article is a synthesis of the first author's experiences of DBT as an autistic person and professional insights from all authors. We provide an overview of the development of DBT, its foundational components, and adaptations. Using this basis, the first author describes the benefits DBT has had, the modifications that have helped him, and how those modifications may enhance DBT for autistic people. Modifications include visuals, graphics, and a gaming format that target the client's personal interests. The essence of these alterations is to transform life skills and DBT skills into something meaningful and functional. Receptivity of the therapist to the modifications and neurodivergent problem solving may be foundational to therapeutic success. Client-initiated contributions in collaborative therapy may improve autistic participants' understanding, validation, and adherence with DBT. The authors suggest expanding work on DBT modifications for autism in the areas of daily self-monitoring, assessing for preferred visual and gaming formats, and utilizing personal interests.


Why is this topic important?: Many autistic people struggle with their emotions. There are few therapies that assist autistic people with these challenges. Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) is a therapy that teaches skills for coping with emotions and forming healthy bonds with others. DBT may provide benefits to autistic people. What is the purpose of this article?: This article uses personal insights with DBT from the first author. The article combines the professional expertise of all authors. We talk about the strengths DBT may have for autistic people. We recommend changes to make DBT a more helpful therapy. What personal or professional perspectives do the authors bring to this topic?: The first author is an autistic researcher in psychology. He has other mental health disabilities. He has been in DBT. The second author is an autistic person working in autism research and advocacy. The remaining authors are non-autistic. They do research and therapy with autistic people. What is already known about this topic?: DBT is used to help people manage their emotions and engage with others successfully. Many autistic people struggle with these skills. There is not a lot of research on how DBT can benefit autistic people. Early work has shown that it might be effective for autistic people. What do the authors recommend?: We outline several changes to DBT that might make it more helpful to autistic people. One change included is using images to help autistic people keep track of therapy skills. Another suggested change is making therapy into a game. More research is needed to test if these changes work in larger groups of autistic people. How will these recommendations help autistic adults now or in the future?: We hope therapists use these changes to DBT to better support autistic people. We hope that this encourages more research into how DBT can better help autistic people. Autistic people may also benefit from DBT skills in their own lives.

2.
J Consult Clin Psychol ; 91(9): 503-504, 2023 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37578755

RESUMO

Despite being targets of intervention practice and research for over 60 years, autistic people have been left out of the conversation. Until recently, nearly no research or implementation work has sought the input of autistic people in regard to the design of interventions and, more importantly, how the goals for such interventions are prioritized and determined. This reframe has profound implications for autism-focused interventions and research, most of which have aimed to reduce or eliminate autism symptoms, with variable empirical support (Bottema-Beutel, 2023). These outcomes are practically and ethically incompatible with a neurodiversity perspective. Most prominently, applied behavior analysis (ABA), which was the first intervention approach widely applied to autistic people, has come under increasing scrutiny and criticism for failing to include autistic people in the design of intervention elements and consideration of goals; moreover, autistic people are increasingly identifying iatrogenic effects they have experienced when receiving ABA (Bottema-Beutel, 2023), with these concerns often being met with minimization rather than an endorsement of their validity and willingness to hear them out. Thus, there is a pressing need for a neurodiversity-affirming interventions (NAI) framework for autism. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).


Assuntos
Transtorno Autístico , Transtorno Autístico/psicologia , Transtorno Autístico/terapia , Marginalização Social , Humanos
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