Dialectical Behaviour Therapy
The History of Dialectical Behaviour Therapy
Dialectical Behaviour therapy DBT is considered a 3rd wave cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT). This means that originally there was the 1st wave of cognitive and behaviour therapies, then the 2nd wave where these two therapies were combined to make cognitive behavioural therapy, and now we have some newer 3rd wave therapies such as DBT, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT).
DBT was developed by Dr Marsha Linehan in the late 1980’s who created this therapy as a way of treating people with Borderline Personality Disorder specifically for helping them with their chronic suicidal feelings. Dr Linehan has Borderline Personality Disorder herself.
One of the key aspects of this therapy which led to the creation of it was that Linehan observed that the chronically suicidal patients had been often raised in profoundly invalidating environments which led people to need a strong and robust therapeutic alliance that required loving-kindness.
What Does Dialectical Behaviour Therapy Involve?
DBT is a very active therapy and it consists of roleplaying, worksheets and participating.
DBT is made up of four components which includes:
- Group skill training
- Individual sessions that review the issues of the week and what skills the person did or could have used to handle them as well as targeting suicidal and sabotaging behaviour
- DBT consult meeting for the therapists
- Phone coaching for helping the person use their skills throughout the week
DBT is split up into four skill modules which includes:
- Mindfulness– learning to be present in the here and now.
- Interpersonal Effectiveness– learning how to communicate with others effectively.
- Distress Tolerance– learning to accept, in a non-evaluative and non-judgemental fashion, both oneself and the current situation.
- Emotion Regulation– people with borderline personality disorder can often feel emotions very intensely and this teaches people how to manage these feelings.
Adolescents have one more module called walking the middle path which is designed to get parents and carers on board.
How Many Sessions of DBT will I Need?
It is not uncommon for someone will complete more than one cycle of DBT this enables them to learn more skills and reinforce the ones that they have already learnt. A typical cycle would last 24 weeks which includes one group and one individual session each week. Below you can see that this takes the form of 2 weeks of mindfulness followed by 6 weeks of a module, this is then repeated until emotion regulation, distress tolerance and interpersonal effectiveness have been covered.
Is Dialectical Behaviour Therapy For Me?
DBT is primarily used for people who have a diagnosis or symptoms of borderline personality disorder or emotionally unstable personality disorder. However, more recent studies have shown it to be effective with depression, bulimia, binge-eating, bipolar disorder, post-traumatic-stress disorder, and substance abuse, but the body of evidence remains limited.
Book A Session of DBT or Find Out More
You can see all our available times for psychology sessions by going to our bookings page, or by giving us a call.