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Tag: dialectical behavior therapy

  • THIRA Health Launches New Residential Treatment Program for Adults

    THIRA Health Launches New Residential Treatment Program for Adults

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    THIRA Health, a mental health treatment center in Bellevue, Washington, is pleased to announce the launch of its Adult Residential Treatment Program. The program is designed to help adults 18 and older who are struggling with severe emotion dysregulation, depression, anxiety, trauma, disordered eating, self-harm, and suicidal behaviors.

    The adult residential treatment program is built upon creative, innovative, and actionable ways of delivering Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) to cultivate long-term, meaningful life changes. 

    With a team of experienced practitioners, this program offers targeted and round-the-clock DBT to improve coping and resilience while treating serious and life-threatening psychiatric disorders.

    According to Sarah Skoterro, Business Development Director for THIRA Health, “Our intention is to provide the most researched and validated methods of therapy to adults challenged with suicidal intentions, self harm, depression and anxiety disorders where round-the-clock care and supervision is necessary.” She added, “We welcome referrals from medical professionals in our region and also have licensed intake professionals available to discuss appropriate treatment options with individuals or family members that have concern for their loved ones.”

    The program’s foundation is comprehensive DBT, emphasizing DBT philosophy, treatment principles, and interventions of individual DBT therapy and Group DBT Skills Training.

    Program elements include:

    • Tailored Psychiatric Medication Management from Psychiatrists and expert Nurse Prescribers
    • Comprehensive Nutrition Program overseen by Registered Dieticians
    • Daily Physical Health Support by Registered Nurses and Certified Nursing Assistants
    • Expressive Arts with specialty-trained staff
    • Mindfulness groups (including mindful movement, yoga, and ikebana)
    • Experiential and Community Engagement Activities (including horticulture and animal-assisted activities)
    • Individualized family engagement sessions
    • Milieu-based DBT skills coaching

    For more information about the program, go to https://www.thirahealth.com/adult-residential-treatment-program/.

    About THIRA Health

    THIRA Health was founded by Dr. Mehri Moore with a vision to provide whole person care in a nurturing and supportive environment. Led by Dr. Kathryn Korslund, our programs bring the rigor of comprehensive DBT imparted to her by her mentor and research collaborator of over 15 years, Dr. Marsha Linehan. Our commitment to the fidelity of the DBT model combined with innovative supportive treatments, nutritional care and medication management ensures top-tier treatment. 

    THIRA is a free-standing, mission-driven licensed behavioral health agency in Washington state and fully accredited by The Joint Commission. Directed by a team of experts with a dedication to helping people build lives they define as worth living, the 100+ clinical and support staff provide services across the care continuum of intensive outpatient, partial hospitalization, and residential treatment for women, teens, and gender non-conforming individuals ages 13+.  

    Source: THIRA Health

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  • Plenty of People Could Quit Therapy Right Now

    Plenty of People Could Quit Therapy Right Now

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    About four years ago, a new patient came to see me for a psychiatric consultation because he felt stuck. He’d been in therapy for 15 years, despite the fact that the depression and anxiety that first drove him to seek help had long ago faded. Instead of working on problems related to his symptoms, he and his therapist chatted about his vacations, house renovations, and office gripes. His therapist had become, in effect, an expensive and especially supportive friend. And yet, when I asked if he was considering quitting treatment, he grew hesitant, even anxious. “It’s just baked into my life,” he told me.

    Among those who can afford it, regular psychotherapy is often viewed as a lifelong project, like working out or going to the dentist. Studies suggest that most therapy clients can measure their treatments in months instead of years, but a solid chunk of current and former patients expect therapy to last indefinitely. Therapists and clients alike, along with celebrities and media outlets, have endorsed the idea of going to therapy for extended stretches, or when you’re feeling fine. I’ve seen this myself with friends who are basically healthy and think of having a therapist as somewhat like having a physical trainer. The problem is, some of the most commonly sought versions of psychotherapy are simply not designed for long-term use.

    Therapy comes in many varieties, but they all share a common goal: to eventually end treatment because you feel and function well enough to thrive on your own. Stopping doesn’t even need to be permanent. If you’ve been going to therapy for a long time, and you’re no longer in acute distress, and you have few symptoms that bother you, consider taking a break. You might be pleasantly surprised by how much you learn about yourself.

    Therapy, in both the short and long term, can be life-altering. Short-term therapy tends to be focused on a particular problem, such as a depressed mood or social anxiety. In cognitive behavioral therapy, usually used for depressive and anxiety disorders, a clinician helps a client relieve negative feelings by correcting the distorted beliefs that he has about himself. In dialectical behavior therapy, commonly used to treat borderline personality disorder, patients learn skills to manage powerful emotions, which helps improve their mood and relationships. Both treatments typically last less than a year. If you start to get rusty or feel especially challenged by life events that come your way, you simply return for another brief stint. Termination is expected and normal.

    Some types of therapy, such as psychodynamic therapy and psychoanalysis, are designed to last for several years—but not forever. The main goal of these therapies is much more ambitious than symptom relief; they aim to uncover the unconscious causes of suffering and to change a client’s fundamental character. At least one well-regarded study found that long-term therapy is both highly effective and superior to briefer treatment for people diagnosed with a clinically significant psychiatric illness; other papers have shown less conclusive evidence for long-term therapy. And few studies compare short and extended treatment for clients with milder symptoms.

    In fact, there’s reason to believe that talk therapy in the absence of acute symptoms may sometimes cause harm. Excessive self-focus—easily facilitated in a setting in which you’re literally paying to talk about your feelings—can increase your anxiety, especially when it substitutes for tangible actions. If your neurotic or depressive symptoms are relatively mild (meaning they don’t really interfere with your daily functioning), you might be better served by spending less time in a therapist’s office and more time connecting with friends, pursuing a hobby, or volunteering. Therapists are trained to use the tools they’ve learned for certain types of problems, and many of the stress-inducing minutiae of daily life are not among them. For example, if you mention to your therapist that you’re having trouble being efficient at work, he might decide to teach you a stress-reduction technique, but your colleagues or boss might provide more specific strategies for improving your performance.

    One of my childhood friends, whose parents were both psychoanalysts, went to weekly therapy appointments while we were growing up. He was a happy, energetic kid, but his parents wanted him and his sister to be better acquainted with their inner lives, to help them deal with whatever adversity came their way. My friend and his sister both grew up to be successful adults, but also highly anxious and neurotic ones. I imagine their parents would say the kids would have been worse without the therapy—after all, mental illness ran in their family. But I can find no substantial clinical evidence supporting this kind of “preventive” psychotherapy.

    Beginning therapy in the first place is, to be clear, a privilege. Therapy is not covered by many insurance plans, and a very large number of people who could benefit from it can’t afford it for any duration. Only 47 percent of Americans with a psychiatric illness received any form of treatment in 2021; in fact, federal estimates suggest that the United States is several thousand mental-health professionals short, a gap that is likely to grow in the coming years. Stopping therapy when you’re ready opens up space for others who might need this scarce service more than you do.

    I do not mean to suggest that a therapy vacation should be considered lightly, or that it’s for everyone. If you have a serious mental-health disorder, such as major depression or bipolar disorder, you should discuss with your mental-health provider whether ending therapy is appropriate for your individual situation. (Keep in mind that your therapist might not be ready to quit when you are. Aside from a financial incentive to continue treatment, parting with a charming, low-maintenance patient is not so easy.) My rule of thumb is that you should have minimal to no symptoms of your illness for six months or so before even considering a pause. Should you and your therapist agree that stopping is reasonable, a temporary break with a clear expiration date is ideal. At any time, if you’re feeling worse, you can always go back.

    Psychiatrists do something similar with psychiatric meds: For example, when I prescribe a depressed patient an antidepressant, and then they remain stable and free of symptoms for several years, I usually consider tapering the medication to determine whether it’s still necessary for the patient’s well-being. I would do this only for patients who are at a low risk of relapse—for example, people who’ve had just one or two episodes, rather than many over a lifetime. Pausing therapy should be even less risky: The beautiful thing about therapy is that, unlike a drug, it equips you with new knowledge and skills, which you carry with you when you leave.

    About a year after my patient and I first talked about ending therapy, I ran into him in a café. He told me that stopping had taken him six months, but now he was thriving. Maybe you, like my patient, are daunted by the idea of quitting cold turkey. If so, consider taking a vacation from treatment instead. It might be the perfect way to see how far you’ve really come.

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    Richard A. Friedman

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  • Managing Treatment-Resistant Depression: One Person’s Story

    Managing Treatment-Resistant Depression: One Person’s Story

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    When Imadé Borha graduated from Columbia University in 2015 with a master’s degree in nonfiction creative writing, she thought the last thing she’d have to worry about was finding a job. It didn’t happen. “That was around the time of the first suicide attempt,” recalls Borha, 34, now a Durham, NC-based communications professional for a nonprofit organization.

    “Career instability was triggering a lot of the mental health problems I was having,” she says. “It had felt like a failure that I had to leave New York, and not having a job” was traumatic.

    Borha was first diagnosed with major depressive disorder in 2012. “It was in response to suicidal behavior, and basically textbook depression,” she says. “When I had the first suicide attempt, that was when I noticed that the three meds I’d taken hadn’t helped.”

    Treatment-resistant depression happens when someone with major depressive disorder hasn’t responded to at least two antidepressants taken in the right dosage for the prescribed amount of time, according to Matthew Rudorfer, MD, a psychiatrist and chief of the somatic treatments and psychopharmacology program at the National Institute of Mental Health in Maryland.

    “There are clearly many shades of major depression. … There is no ‘one-size-fits-all’ solution. Rather, the best clinical intervention for the person with [treatment-resistant depression] should be personalized to the individual. A major aim of ongoing research is to improve the ability to match patients with the right treatment.”

    A New Diagnosis

    In 2019, Borha was diagnosed with borderline personality disorder (BPD), which brings mood swings, a shaky sense of self, impulsive behavior, and trouble forming relationships.

    “The symptoms of BPD include extreme, intense emotions that can be triggered by reactions like a sense of abandonment or rejection,” she says. She feels being turned down for jobs and other opportunities brought her symptoms roaring to the surface.

    Amid the mental turmoil, it took a while for Borha to tease out how much anxiety drove much of her thinking and actions. “When you’re highly suicidal, you really don’t have the time to ask, ‘Do I have an anxiety problem?’ ” In time, she tried the prescription anti-anxiety med buspirone (BuSpar). It helped quiet her mind. Along with dialectical behavioral therapy, her world began to come into focus.

    Dialectical behavioral therapy blends weekly talk therapy with group skills training. It zeroes in on emotions and takes a balanced approach to both accept oneself and learn ways to make helpful changes. It was first developed to treat BPD and women with suicidal tendencies, but now it’s used to treat other related problems, too.

    “It helps folks like me, who have really big emotions, have skills or tools to help regulate those emotions so our lives aren’t looking like chaos every single day,” Borha says. Exercise — mainly high-intensity interval training — helps keep her centered too, she says.

    Community Is Key

    “I do strongly believe that building [a mental health] community is going to keep me alive, keep my suicidal behavior and self-harm low,” Borha says. At the same time, she finds it tough to build interpersonal relationships because of her fear of abandonment and rejection. “I speak a lot, but when it comes to day-to-day interaction about my current mental health, it’s hard. I need to be more vulnerable, to put myself out there, to just be honest with people.”

    Borha says resistance to seeking treatment for mental or emotional conditions is deep-rooted in the Black community. “We’re dealing with a situation where historically, when Black people disclose they’re sad, they’re depressed, or they’re angry, they’ll be punished. They feel their lives can be in danger. That response echoes through their families and support systems.”

    Borha says the mindset to keep problems in the family, under wraps, is loosening up a little. “Now, [Black people with mental issues] have a chance to find therapists and other resources.” However, she still sees obstacles and racial bias related to care.

    Through her website, DepressedWhileBlack.com, Borha tries to link her followers with therapists who’ll understand them. Right now, her Help Me Find a Therapist program is on hiatus while her team catches up on the backlog of requests.

    Be Your Own Researcher

    “I do think treatment-resistant depression is a huge part of the suicide crisis,” Borha says. “If we can treat people who’ve struggled with it, we can save lives.”

    The antidepressant esketamine (Spravato) is the only drug the FDA has approved specifically for treatment-resistant depression, though a range of other treatments and therapies can help and continue to be studied, Rudorfer says. Esketamine comes from ketamine. It’s a nasal spray that has to be given and monitored by a health care provider.

    Borha says she’s asked her insurance to cover esketamine, but so far it’s a no-go. Meanwhile, she presses on to study and learn more about her condition.

    “I would say research your symptoms, because you may [need] a different diagnosis,” she says. “Then use that research to do self-advocacy. Tell your therapist or psychiatrist what else is out there that they haven’t considered, when it comes to diagnoses.”

    And, she says, “It’s OK to be wrong. … If psychiatrists can be wrong, I can be wrong. As patients, we have the right to experiment, and to fail, and to try again. We have that right.”

    “Just experiment, research, and go for it,” she says. “Advocate for yourself.”

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