Bipolar Disorders (BD) typically involve repeated episodes of both depression and excessively high mood or irritability (hypomania or mania). BD presents considerable challenges for the individual, his or her supporters, and society more generally. Medication is generally considered to be the mainstay treatment, however a substantial number of individuals with BD continue to experience episodes despite use of medication. Furthermore, ongoing mood instability either outside of episodes, or as the main feature of their BD, is a significant difficulty experienced by many. Whilst studies suggest that certain psychological therapies can be helpful for people experiencing full bipolar episodes, or to reduce risk of future episodes, there are no evidencebased psychological therapies available for individuals experiencing ongoing mood instability. Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT) was developed several decades ago as an approach for people with Borderline Personality Disorder. DBT aims to give individuals who experience rapid and intense shifts in affect skills for managing this. Despite the many similarities in the symptoms experienced by individuals with Borderline Personality Disorder and those with Bipolar Disorder only a small number of studies have tested DBT for BD, and no studies to date have specifically investigated DBT as a means to help individuals with ongoing mood instability. We have developed a version of groupbased DBT that draws upon our own research to adapt standard DBT for this client group (DBTBD). The group is designed to be delivered efficiently within the U.K. healthcare system whilst meeting the needs of individual participants through use of additional individual sessions and a mobile phone application. The current study investigates how acceptable DBTBD is to clinicians and patients, and whether - for the small number of individuals in the study -changes in symptoms and key ways of thinking and behaving appear to take place across the period of treatment.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
13
University of Exeter
Exeter, Devon, United Kingdom
Acceptability of the therapy (% completing treatment)
Time frame: 10 months
Acceptability of the therapy and study procedures
Qualitiative feedback from participants
Time frame: 10 months
Feasibility of the study procedures
recruitment rate; feedback from referrers and clincians / researchers
Time frame: 10 months
Clinical effectiveness
symptoms, quality of life, recovery status. Analysis focuses upon the sensitvity of these measures to change, and pre-post correlations.
Time frame: 15 months
Process measures
self report measures of key psychological processes hypothesised to be changed by therapy. Analysis focuses upon the sensitvity of these measures to change, and pre-post correlations.
Time frame: 10 months
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