Women with borderline personality
disorder who receive dialectical behavioral therapy halve their risk for suicide
attempts compared with expert but general therapy
Women with borderline personality disorder who receive
dialectical behavioral therapy halve the risk for a suicide attempt compared with
women who are treated by therapists who are expert in treating difficult patients,
according to an article in the July issue of the Archives of General Psychiatry.
In addition, the women who received dialectical behavior
therapy also were less likely to go to an emergency room for suicidal behavior
or to be hospitalized for psychiatric reasons, said Marsha Linehan, PhD, lead
author of a new study. None of the women in the study who attempted suicide were
successful during the one-year study and one-year follow-up.
Women who received dialectical therapy also were significantly
less likely to switch therapists or drop out of treatment, said Linehan. This
is the seventh randomized controlled study to show that dialectical behavior therapy,
which balances change and acceptance, is the most effective treatment for borderline
personality disorder. The treatment was developed at the University of Washington.
The study is the first in a series to identify specific elements of treatment
that make it so effective in dealing with patients who have borderline personality
disorder, which is notoriously difficult to treat. The new research was designed
to determine whether treatment was successful because of therapist skill or the
treatment itself.
"The importance of the study is that is shows a very specific treatment,
dialectical behavior therapy, was very effective in treating people with borderline
personality disorder, and this therapy is uniquely effective in treating suicidal
behavior. We cut the number of suicide attempts in half," said Linehan.
An estimated 5.8 million to 8.7 million Americans, mostly women, suffer from
borderline personality disorder. People with the condition have a multiple spectrum
of disorders are marked by emotional instability, difficulty in maintaining close
relationships, eating disorders, impulsivity, chronic uncertainty about life goals
and addictive behaviors such as using drugs and alcohol. They also have a very
high suicide rate and a have major impact on the medical system by being among
the highest users of emergency and in-patient medical services.
"People with borderline personality disorder have difficulty regulating
their emotion and their lives so dialectical behavior therapy is designed to help
clients build a life worth living," said Linehan "Not only do they attach
to us, we attach to them."
The study involved 101 women between the ages of 18 and 45 years who met criteria
for borderline personality disorder, including suicidal behavior ? two suicide
attempts or self-injuries in the past five years with at least one of them in
the previous eight weeks. The women were computer matched and randomly assigned
to treatment conditions for one year of treatment plus a year of post-treatment
follow-up.
Half the women were assigned to therapists who were trained in dialectical
behavior therapy. The others were assigned to one of a group of expert therapists
nominated by community mental health leaders, including heads of inpatient psychiatric
units and clinical mental health agencies. These community therapists were selected
on the basis of their skill in working with difficult patients and used a variety
of treatment approaches. However, none were cognitive behavioral therapists.
The women in the dialectical behavior therapy group received weekly individual
psychotherapy and weekly group skills training, as well as telephone access to
their therapist for a year. The study did not mandate the type of treatment provided
by the expert therapists to the other group of women. Instead, the therapists
were told to provide the type and amount of therapy they believed was best suited
to each patient, with a minimum of one individual session a week for one year.
Additional treatment could be prescribed as needed. Women in both groups were
tracked every four months for an additional year following treatment to measure
the effects of their therapy.
Another major finding of the study is that treatment by expert therapists
may be better than treatment that is usually offered to people with borderline
personality disorder, according to Linehan.
"These people usually are told that they can't be treated. But therapy
by experts who can deal with suicide and borderline personality problems is a
definite second choice after a therapist trained in dialectical behavior therapy,"
she said.
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