Harley and colleagues demonstrated that adding Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) skills-groups and therapist consultation to treatment as usual successfully reduced symptoms of depression. The present study will expand upon these findings. Second, DBT is not known for reducing suicidal ideation (SI), a major risk factor for suicide . The present study will tailor the aforementioned skills-groups to specifically target suicidal thoughts and behaviors through Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT) strategies aimed at increasing problem-solving deficits, hopelessness, and negativistic thinking. Third, the present study will extend this DBT-based approach to a novel population. Fourth, the present study is the first DBT intervention to employ state-of-the-art multi-method measurement (including objective assessment) of suicidal thoughts and behaviors. The investigators hypothesize that participants in the DBT skills (DBT-S) group will show improvements in level of suicidality as measured by decreased scores on the Beck Scale for Suicide Ideation as compared with participants in the Wait List-Treatment as Usual (WL-TAU) group.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
26
The intervention will be delivered within an 18-week, once-weekly, one-and-half-hour skill group (8 participants per group) comprised of the same four modules administered in standard DBT skills training groups: (1) mindfulness, (2) interpersonal effectiveness, (3) emotion regulation, and (4) distress tolerance. There will be four sessions for each module totaling 16 sessions. There will be two booster sessions reviewing mindfulness and the concept of dialectics in-between each of the modules (i.e., between modules 2 and 3 and 3 and 4).
Participants will be seen by their standard treaters for 18 weeks as usual.
Participants will receive the intervention after 18 weeks in the treatment as usual group.
Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Beck Scale for Suicidal Ideation (SSI)
If randomized to the intervention, they will be assessed monthly for 18 weeks, then at 3 and 6-month follow-up visits. If they are randomized to the Wait list-Treatment as Usual (WL-TAU) group and then cross over into the intervention group, they will be assessed for a total of 36 weeks, not including the 3 and 6-month follow-up assessments.
Time frame: Participants will be assessed using the SSI monthly throughout the duration of their study participation for up to 15 months (see description for details)
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