Differentiating Suicidality & Self-Harm & Use of DBT as an Intervention for Emotional Dysregulation in a Therapeutic School Milieu

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Differentiating Suicidality & Self-Harm & Use of DBT as an Intervention for Emotional Dysregulation in a Therapeutic School Milieu Carole Hynes, RN,MSN, CS Program Manager Richard Howard, EdD Educational Administrator Evanston Day School

Our Mission and Goal To provide the highest quality care possible to students with emotion disturbance and mental health concerns which interfere with learning in a therapeutic educational setting. To help prepare students for return to a mainstream school environment and improve daily functioning.

Committed Professional Staff Program Administrator Educational Administrator Senior Program Secretary 3 Full Time Social Workers Social Work Intern 3 Full and 2 Part Time Special Education Teachers

Accreditation and Expertise Approved by the Joint Commission for Accreditation of Hospitals (JCHAHO). Approved Therapeutic Day School by the Illinois State Board of Education. All instructional staff approved by the State of Illinois for Special Education. All social work staff are Licensed Clinical Social Workers.

Target Populations Served 25 Students ranging in age from 12 to 19 from 7 th through 12 th grade. Students, with a Special Education eligibility of Emotional Disturbance, Learning Disabilities, Other Health Impairment or Autism Spectrum Disorder. Referring school districts vary among 30 or more in the North and Northwest suburban area and Chicago.

Meeting Individualized Student Needs Emotional and Behavioral IEP driven holistic student interventions. Milieu treatment utilizing observation, role modeling, self esteem building and social skills development. Relationship based program. Academic and Functional Core Curriculum based course offerings. Instruction reflects student needs with DBT/CBT styled therapeutic instruction. Differentiated Instructional presentations. Study Island data collection and progress monitoring.

Program Service Design Highly specific and process driven Individualized Education Plans. Educational Assessment. Case management coordination with School District teams and health care providers. Weekly family therapy and parent support groups. Health Screenings. Individualized treatment plans with consulting adolescent psychiatrist. Life Skills education and transition planning. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and Dialectical Behavioral Therapy

Non-Suicidal Self-Injury (NSSI): Myths and Realities Defining and distinguishing between self-harm and suicidality; relationship between the two How to manage this behavior in a therapeutic school environment Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT) an empirically supported treatment of choice for adolescent NSSI and emotional dysregulation

Definitions Suicidal behavior completed suicide, suicide attempts, and suicidal ideation Non-Suicidal Self-Injury (NSSI) deliberate self-injury with lack of intent to die

Distinguishing Self-Harming Behavior from Suicide Risk Intent to die: The key distinguishing variable Difficult to assess Can change moment to moment Can change over time within same person

Self-Harming Behaviors in Adolescents (adapted from Rathus, 2014) Onset of self-harming behavior most often occurs during adolescence About 10% of adolescents in clinical samples will repeat the NSSI within a year

Myths About Self-Injury They do it to get attention Peer pressure is the main culprit: everyone is doing it Drugs and alcohol increase the likelihood of self injury Certain kids manage physical pain better than emotional pain It s a failed suicide attempt

Self-Harm Behaviors in Adolescents (Adapted from Rathus 2014) Less than 1 in 4 adolescents who report self-harm receive medical treatment NSSI w/lack of intent can still be lethal (i.e., accidental death) NSSI without intent can be a predictor of eventual suicide, Habituation to self-harm behaviors occurs over time, and so teens need to engage in increasingly more severe acts to attain the same effect

Risk Factors for Self-Injury Biological vulnerability-- sensitive child Emotional dysregulation Impulsivity Emotional Illiteracy: inability to identify and label emotions Inability to ask for help Dwelling on negative situations

Common Motives for Self-Harm Behaviors in Adolescents To alleviate emotional pain and distress To stop bad thoughts To feel something or stop numbness Self punishment To have control To vent anger To see if people care Tension release; releases endorphins

Risk Factors for Suicide Psychiatric diagnosis (Major Depression, Bipolar disorder) Substance use A recent loss: death of a family member, break up of a romantic relationship, etc. Struggling with sexual orientation Recent suicide of another adolescent in the community Feelings of hopelessness Access to firearms

Suicide Warning Signs Suicide threats Obsession with death Dramatic change in personality or appearance Overwhelming sense of shame or guilt Severe drop in school performance Giving away belongings

Emotional Dysregulation Suicide attempts and NSSI go hand in hand with a cluster of high-risk behaviors including: School problems Family problems Risky sexual behaviors Substance abuse Eating Disorders Externalizing behaviors

Why Use DBT? DBT skills have practical applications and are not abstract. DBT focuses on the here and now. It does not deal with the why until a person is safe. DBT targets symptoms such as suicidal behavior and selfinjury.

DBT Assumptions about Patients Patients are doing the best they can Patients want to improve Patients must learn new behaviors in relevant contexts Patients may not have caused all of their problems, but they have to solve them anyway

Validation Conveys legitimacy and acceptance of the other s experience or behavior Three ways to validate: Invalidation» Attentive listening» Active listening» Giving voice to the unspoken Delegitimizes valid experiences or fails to acknowledge their existence and/or legitimacy Makes problems appear easier to solve than they actually are (for that person)

DBT Skills Modules Mindfulness Interpersonal Effectiveness Distress Tolerance Emotion Regulation

Mindfulness WHAT skills 1. Observe 2. Describe 3. Participate HOW skills 1. Without judgment 2. Focusing on one thing in the moment 3. Effectively

Wise Mind Three primary states of mind are presented: Rational mind Emotion mind Wise mind Wise mind is the integration of emotion mind and rational mind Your gut feeling

Distress Tolerance DBT emphasizes learning to bear pain skillfully The ability to tolerate and accept distress is as essential to mental health as pain and distress are a part of life Without the ability to tolerate distress, impulsive actions will interfere with efforts to establish desired changes Skills such as: Self-Soothing, Improving the Moment (prayer, distraction), Thinking of Pros and Cons, Radical Acceptance

Emotional Regulation Emotions tend to be intense and labile (all emotions!!) Emotions just are (just like our senses we teach patients not to judge them) The patient can control the behavior but not necessarily the primary emotion All emotions have action tendencies Skills include managing the duration and intensity of the emotion, recognizing the vulnerability factors to emotional states, and learning to experience positive emotions P.L.E.A.S.E. MASTER skills are critical treat PhysicaL illness, balance Eating, avoid mood-altering drugs, balance Sleep, get Exercise, build Mastery

Interpersonal Effectiveness Skills help to take care of or repair relationships To balance priorities; to balance the person's needs with others needs To balance wants (things that a patient wants to do) with shoulds (things they ought to do) To build mastery and promote self respect To teach about cognitive distortions that interfere with relationships (black and white thinking, all-or-nothing thinking, assumptions become realities, discounting the positives, fortune telling, mind-reading, catastrophizing) Skills such as DEAR MAN, GIVE, and FAST

Interpersonal Effectiveness DEAR MAN Describe Express Assert Reinforce (Stay) Mindful Appear Confident Negotiate

Interpersonal Effectiveness GIVE (Be) Gentle (Act) Interested Validate Easy Manner FAST (Be) Fair (No) Apologies Stick to your values (Be) Truthful

Middle Path Focuses on teaching adolescents and their parents the concepts of dialectics, validation, and behavioral therapy Specific emphasis on the relationship between parents and teens Targets the power struggles of adolescent-parent life

Role of School Personnel in Management of Self-Harming Students Teachers and other school personnel need to be educated about how self-harming behavior is different from suicidal behavior Since teachers are often the first to notice that a student has self-injured, how they respond initially is critical for building trust and getting the student help Teachers and other school personnel need to avoid responding with disgust, anxiety, and fear; avoid lecturing students about the dangers of this behavior

Questions?

Role of School Personnel in Management of Self-Harming Students Teachers need to give the message that they care about the student and are available for emotional connection and support Students engaging in self-harming behavior should be assessed to determine if they need a psychiatric evaluation Follow schools individual policy to maintain consistency of response