Dialectical behaviour therapy for adolescents: a comparison of 16-week and 24-week programmes delivered in a public community setting

Child and Adolescent Mental Health
Conall GillespiePaul Corcoran

Abstract

Dialectical behaviour therapy for adolescents (DBT-A) is an intervention with a growing evidence base for treating adolescents with emotional and behavioural dysregulation. Previous studies have reported on varying lengths of treatment, however, and optimal treatment duration has not yet been identified. While the treatment developers initially proposed a 16-week programme, they have more recently recommended an extension to 24 weeks. This study compares outcomes for adolescents and parent/guardians who participated in 16- and 24-week DBT-A programmes in a community setting. Eighty-four adolescents and 100 parent/guardians participated in 16-week DBT-A, while 68 adolescents and 67 parent/guardians participated in the 24-week programme. Outcome measures for adolescents included the presence and frequency of self-harm, suicidal ideation and depression; and for parents were burden, grief and parental stress. Outcomes were assessed at pre- and postintervention. Linear mixed-effects models were used to estimate the treatment duration effect (24-week vs. 16-week) utilising all available data at pre- and postintervention. Data analyses showed a reduction in the presence and frequency of self-harm at postintervention for adolescents in...Continue Reading

References

Jun 25, 2002·Suicide & Life-threatening Behavior·Jill H Rathus, Alec L Miller
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Jan 12, 2007·Psychopathology·Martin BohusRolf-Dieter Stieglitz
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May 12, 2016·The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews·Keith HawtonKees van Heeringen
May 4, 2018·Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology·Eve GriffinElla Arensman

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Citations

Mar 8, 2021·The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews·Katrina G WittKeith Hawton

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