Item type: | Article | ||||
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Journal or Publication Title: | Journal of Psychiatric Practice | ||||
Publisher: | LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS | ||||
Place of Publication: | PHILADELPHIA | ||||
Volume: | 25 | ||||
Number of Issue or Book Chapter: | 3 | ||||
Page Range: | pp. 192-198 | ||||
Date: | 2019 | ||||
Institutions: | Human Sciences > Institut für Psychologie Human Sciences > Institut für Psychologie > Lehrstuhl für Klinische Psychologie und Psychotherapie - Lehrstuhl für Psychologie VIII - Prof. Dr. Andreas Mühlberger | ||||
Identification Number: |
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Keywords: | DELIBERATE SELF-HARM; EMOTION REGULATION; DIFFICULTIES; DEPRESSION; VALIDATION; MECHANISMS; ANXIETY; WOMEN; dialectical behavior therapy; inpatient; borderline personality disorder; emotion regulation | ||||
Dewey Decimal Classification: | 100 Philosophy & psychology > 150 Psychology | ||||
Status: | Published | ||||
Refereed: | Yes, this version has been refereed | ||||
Created at the University of Regensburg: | Yes | ||||
Item ID: | 48702 |
Abstract
Objective: The goal of this study was to evaluate whether symptoms are reduced and emotion regulation improves when patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD) receive a 5-week course of inpatient dialectical behavioral therapy (DBT) and if changes in emotion regulation are associated with changes in symptoms. Methods: Forty-four patients with BPD receiving a 5-week course of DBT in a ...

Abstract
Objective: The goal of this study was to evaluate whether symptoms are reduced and emotion regulation improves when patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD) receive a 5-week course of inpatient dialectical behavioral therapy (DBT) and if changes in emotion regulation are associated with changes in symptoms. Methods: Forty-four patients with BPD receiving a 5-week course of DBT in a German psychiatry clinic participated. The short version of the "Borderline Symptom List" (BSL-23) was the patient-reported outcome. To measure emotion regulation, the "Self-Report Measure for the Assessment of Emotion Regulation Skills" (SEK-27) was administered. Wilcoxon tests were performed to evaluate whether pre-post changes in the BSL-23 and SEK-27 reached statistical significance. Effect sizes (d) were calculated and correlations between the pre-post differences for both measures were computed to test associations between changes in emotion regulation and changes in symptoms. Completer (n=33) and intention-to-treat (n=43) analyses were performed. Results: Symptoms (BSL-23) were reduced and emotion regulation (SEK-27) improved during the 5-week inpatient DBT treatment (completer and intention-to-treat analysis: P<0.001). Effect sizes reached d=0.47 for the BSL-23 and d=0.84 for the SEK-27 in the completer analysis, and d=0.38 for the BSL-23 and d=0.68 for the SEK-27 in the intention-to-treat analysis. Improvements in emotion regulation (SEK-27) were correlated with reductions in symptoms (BSL-23) in both the completer (r=0.54; P=0.001) and the intention-to-treat (r=0.59; P<0.001) analyses. Conclusions: These findings indicate that a 5-week course of inpatient DBT can effectively reduce symptoms in patients with BPD and that the more patients' emotion regulation improves, the more the patients benefit from the therapy.
Metadata last modified: 03 Feb 2022 10:02