treatment or their usual treatment alone
(Davidson
et al
., in press). Across both treatment
arms there was gradual and sustained
improvement, with evidence of benefit for the
addition of CBT on the positive symptom distress
index at one year (the end of the active therapy
period), and on state anxiety, dysfunctional
beliefs and the quantity of suicidal acts at two
year follow-up (Davidson
et al
., 2005).
DBT involves both individual therapy and a
group psycho-educational component. In the
group component,
patients are taught self-
management skills, distress tolerance skills and
how to deal with interpersonal situations more
effectively. In the accompanying individual
therapy sessions, the therapist first focuses on
behavioural and supportive techniques to reduce
self-harm, before moving on to apply other
directive and supportive techniques to other
problem areas including any behaviour which
interferes with ongoing work in therapy. DBT
encourage patients to accept negative mood
states without resorting to self-harm or other
maladaptive behaviours.
DBT for women with borderline personality
disorder has been
shown to be effective in
reducing self-harm during treatment (Linehan
et
al
., 1991; Verheul, 2003). However, no
differences were found between those who had
DBT and those who had treatment as usual in
respect of reported levels of depression, suicidal
ideation, hopelessness and reasons for living at
the time of treatment (Linehan
et al
., 1991,
1994). For those who had received DBT, the
positive effect of treatment on episodes of self-
harm continued for six months after treatment
ended, but during the subsequent six to twelve
months follow-up period, no differences were
found between the groups in the number of
suicide attempts (Linehan
et al
., 1993).
In a study of female military veterans (Koons
et al
., 2001), only 40
per cent of whom had an
episode of deliberate self harm in the previous
six-months, those who received DBT improved
on measures of depression and hopelessness
compared to those receiving treatment as usual
but no difference in rates of self-harm or
inpatient days during treatment were found
(Koons
et al
., 2001). As there is only one study of
DBT with women with borderline personality
disorder that has followed-up patients after
treatment, more follow-up studies are needed to
assess the longevity of changes in self-harm.
However, from the evidence available, it does
appear that
for women with borderline
personality disorder, DBT can be an effective
treatment for self-harm and differences between
the studies may be due to the different sample of
women selected, and particularly the frequency
of self-harm in the samples studied.
Several studies have examined the efficacy of
an adapted form of DBT for women with
borderline personality disorder and comorbid
substance abuse (Linehan
et al
., 1999; Linehan
et
al
., 2002). During treatment, the results showed
few differences
between DBT and treatment as
usual, but at follow-up, those who received DBT
showed important gains in terms of abstinence
from drugs and less parasuicidal behaviour.
However, when DBT was compared to a more
structured psychological treatment, namely
comprehensive validation therapy, no differences
were found in outcomes on any measure
(Linehan
et al
., 2002). It may be that treatment
may need to be longer for some patients, and as
DBT
has developed, more long-term contact has
been offered to patients. Positive findings need
to be replicated using larger numbers of patients
and in more independent studies.
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