New research discovered a variety of dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) interventions helped to reduce suicide attempts and nonsuicidal self-injury acts in a group of high-risk women.

As published online by JAMA Psychiatry, the randomized clinical trial was performed on women with borderline personality disorder who were highly suicidal.

DBT is a multicomponent therapy for individuals at high risk for suicide and for those with multiple severe mental disorders, particularly those who have marked impulsivity and an inability to regulate emotions.

DBT includes individual therapy, group skills training, between-session telephone coaching and a therapist consultation team.

In the new study, researchers focused on the importance of DBT skills training compared with the other components.

To do this, DBT pioneer Dr. Marsha M. Linehan, of the University of Washington, Seattle, and coauthors compared three treatment groups.

The first group received skills training plus case management to replace individual therapy (DBT-S); the second, DBT individual therapy plus activities group to replace skills training so therapists instead focused on the skills patients already had (DBT-I); and finally, standard DBT, which included skills training and individual therapy.

The DBT Suicide Risk Assessment and Management protocol was used with all patients in the study.

The study included 99 women (average age 30) who had borderline personality disorder with at least two suicide attempts and/or nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI) acts in the last five years, an NSSI act or suicide attempt in the eight weeks before screening, and a suicide attempt in the past year.

Of the women, 33 were randomized to each of the three treatment groups: standard DBT, DBT-S or DBT-I.

The authors found all three treatments reduced suicide attempts, suicide ideation, medical severity of intentional self-injury, use of crisis services due to suicidality and improved reasons for living.

“Contrary to our expectations, standard DBT was not superior to either comparison condition for any suicide-related outcome, and no significant differences were detected between DBT-S and DBT-I.

“Thus, all three versions of DBT were comparably effective at reducing suicidality among individuals at high risk for suicide,” the researchers noted.

Source: JAMA Networks

DBT Shown to Reduce Suicide Tries in High-Risk Women