| Literature DB >> 26465757 |
Kirsten Barnicot1, Laura Couldrey1, Sima Sandhu1, Stefan Priebe1.
Abstract
Despite evidence suggesting that skills training is an important mechanism of change in dialectical behaviour therapy, little research exploring facilitators and barriers to this process has been conducted. The study aimed to explore clients' experiences of barriers to dialectical behaviour therapy skills training and how they felt they overcame these barriers, and to compare experiences between treatment completers and dropouts. In-depth qualitative interviews were conducted with 40 clients with borderline personality disorder who had attended a dialectical behaviour therapy programme. A thematic analysis of participants' reported experiences found that key barriers to learning the skills were anxiety during the skills groups and difficulty understanding the material. Key barriers to using the skills were overwhelming emotions which left participants feeling unable or unwilling to use them. Key ways in which participants reported overcoming barriers to skills training were by sustaining their commitment to attending therapy and practising the skills, personalising the way they used them, and practising them so often that they became an integral part of their behavioural repertoire. Participants also highlighted a number of key ways in which they were supported with their skills training by other skills group members, the group therapists, their individual therapist, friends and family. Treatment dropouts were more likely than completers to describe anxiety during the skills groups as a barrier to learning, and were less likely to report overcoming barriers to skills training via the key processes outlined above. The findings of this qualitative study require replication, but could be used to generate hypotheses for testing in further research on barriers to skills training, how these relate to dropout, and how they can be overcome. The paper outlines several such suggestions for further research.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26465757 PMCID: PMC4605586 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0140635
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Author Reflexivity.
| Author 1 | Author 2 | Author 3 | Author 4 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Health services researcher | Health services researcher and expert by experience | Health services researcher | Health services researcher and consultant psychiatrist |
|
| Interviewer | Supporting data analysis | Supporting data analysis | PhD supervisor |
| Lead analyst | ||||
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| Established relationships with interviewees | Personal experience of receiving DBT in the service being evaluated | Familiarity with extant mental health services research literature | Good working relationships with the DBT service |
| Good working relationships with the DBT service | Lead on randomised controlled trial evaluation of DBT | |||
| Lead on quantitative evaluation of process-outcome links in DBT | Familiarity with extant DBT research literature | |||
| Familiarity with extant DBT research literature |
Supporting Quotes for Theme 1: Difficulties Learning the Skills (N = 34).
| Sub-theme | Examples of Supporting Quotes |
|---|---|
| Sub-theme 1 Anxiety during the skills groups (N = 25) | “I wouldn’t ask for help cos I was shy and withdrawn and… and they used to say ‘Do you all understand it? I just used to say ‘Yeah’” |
| “I didn't take nothing in, everything just went over my head……All I can put it down to is that I didn’t feel comfortable in the group and I didn't wanna be in there, so…… I just couldn’t understand it. I just wanted to get out of the room, that’s all I was thinking of, is getting out of the room” | |
| “You’re worried about, you’ve got your homework wrong when you go to the group. And they tell you off in the group, they don’t actually tell you off by yourself” | |
| “It was like a child being at school…. And school to me is a terrifying thought….. the more authoritative they were, the more that I was convinced it was school……and I was getting more and more agitated” | |
| “I think you have to write off the first couple of classes because it’s very much overwhelming. You’re like, ‘Oh my god I’m a new person, what am I doing here?’ I don’t understand it’. And you’ve just got too much going on to focus on what is being taught anyway” | |
| “When I finally got there it was still quite shocking. A bit much……Because it’s such a small room as well. And there was loads of people round the table……I felt kind of a bit claustrophobic and nervous…… It’s kinda like a daze, and you don’t remember it……You’ve still got worry thoughts, still in your sad… your mood’s still there and stuff, and you’re still in that frame of ‘Is this gonna work?’ “or ‘I’m never gonna feel like people that have finished’” | |
| Sub-theme 2 Difficulties with the presentation of the skills material (N = 25) | “There is a lot of information…there is a lot coming at you …… the Americanisation of some of the stuff in here is a bit… a bit tricky sometimes to actually um, believe… it sometimes feels like some of the technical words are a bit off-putting… possibly making the language more accessible would make it seem less threatening” |
| “Day one I was completely thrown ……you just think, what on earth is ‘mindful’? There’s jargon for you to get to grips with from day one.” | |
| “They should have explained more of the skills to you instead of big words …..they should shorten it down a bit more…. Not some big posh word where you don’t understand,… it’s very difficult when you don’t understand,” | |
| “I don’t understand them……ACCEPTS……Each letter forms something, a word……And in each one, I don’t—I can’t quite grasp the idea of it—of doing it” | |
| “It’s difficult to translate the way—the DBT language and the way they want you to speak—into normal interaction…… It’s like the jargon…It took me quite a while [….] to understand” | |
| “The DEARMAN…… I get a little confused with the acronym…and I forget some of the points” |
Supporting quotes for Theme 4: An Environment that Supports Change (N = 31).
| Sub-theme | Examples of Supporting Quotes |
|---|---|
|
| “I find the groups where I learn… where sort of everything sinks in a bit more, are the ones that have been a bit lighter and there's been a bit of laughter.” |
| “There are certain teachers that will work round and ask people for examples, and I think that needs to be kind of maintained to keep people’s attention… just getting the interaction as opposed to someone standing there and just reading stuff out.” | |
| “Sometimes they put their personal experience in as well which I think is helpful…… It stops you feeling quite so much like a schoolchild; makes it more of an interactive experience…… It stops you as well from feeling disconnected from the rest of humanity rather than just being sort of… someone who always has problems” | |
| “I was like 'This is never gonna work'… [But] other people were saying it worked……It was like ‘Nothing else has worked, if people are saying this shit works, I might as well try it.’” | |
| “Other people would come and be like ‘Oh, this happened, this situation was happening and this is how they acted’……You can always think about situations of your own that are similar to that, and then you think ‘ Ah I guess I could do it that way’, y’know……I can take more from someone’s personal experience than if they just give me sometimes a hypothetical question.” | |
|
| “When I didn’t [understand], I’d go to see my one to one therapist, and he would explain them to me, and they would become clear…I understood after I went to him” |
| “Where I felt really sad and felt to self-harm, we would talk about what could have happened differently before that thought came that you know like, Distress Tolerance, what you could have done to…to change that situation, different distress techniques, tolerance techniques that you could use” | |
| “In the role play, right, you’ve got nothing to lose, you know that this is pretend. But you can come up with every single scenario, and every single ‘He might say this, or he might say this, or this might happen or this might happen—so what will you do if this happens?’ And so you know what to expect.” | |
|
| “Cause [Partner]’s also gone on the family DBT group. Um, she’ll sort of say… ‘This is a fact’. Or ‘What you… what you’re saying is not based on fact, give me a fact’. And then it’ll just… it just seems to take the heat out of the argument somewhat” |
| “I spoke to [Partner], my other half, about what I learnt… in turn sometimes when I was maybe lacking in using my skills, he would be able to give me that kick up the backside” |
Supporting Quotes for Theme 2: Difficulties Putting the Skills into Practice (N = 32).
| Sub-theme | Examples of Supporting Quotes |
|---|---|
|
| “When I’m in a state, perhaps that’s gonna be the last thing on my mind……I don’t think, ‘Ooh right, I’ll self-soothe’, or, ‘Ooh, use my wise mind’, I just can’t…I feel like my head gets sort of shut in and that’s it” [Participant 1, DBT completer]. |
| “It's difficult to stop and think, ‘Ooh I should be thinking of… I should be doing this one mindfully’….when you’re feeling really emotional—it’s harder to try and bring yourself together enough to use them…..when I’m sort of in an emotional turmoil inside me” | |
| “Sometimes……you can’t think about your skills, you’re just overwhelmed….you forget” | |
| “When I am really sad or really emotional, nothing comes into my mind then. It’s just… all I can focus on is that feeling. I can’t think this or think that. Nothing sort of… just blackness, that’s all I kind of see” | |
| “[The insomnia] really did take a toll on my practising the skills, definitely…..it wouldn’t even come into my head at the end…, I can’t even think of what I’m doing wrong or what is right I can’t think of anything.” | |
| “Sometimes I get too emotional and I just can’t use [the skills]. It just gets above that line and I just can’t. No matter what I do I just got to go with it, burst into tears or whatever ‘cause I just can’t stop it”. | |
|
| “Sometimes when I’ve had a relapse I think, ‘It’s too hard, it's too hard to think of everything…there’s too much to think of and it's too much at once, and it's not gonna help.’” |
| “I tried so many times to use the new skills when I felt myself in a situation like… but every time I tried, it failed, so I just gave up trying……I said to myself, ‘This ain’t working, so it ain’t worth trying no more.’ | |
| “Learning those skills is gonna be scary, it’s gonna make you very nervous, agitated and it’s gonna be damn hard. So somebody like me is instantly gonna go into your own comfort of what you’ve made yourself to comfort yourself, to stop yourself getting agitated, to stop yourself getting nervous. You’re gonna do it your way again” | |
| “Sometimes I get a little angry … ‘cause I think why do I want all these skills, I don’t want to have to use them around people—nobody else has to use them, why should I?” | |
| “I was sick of hearing like ‘What distress tolerance are you going to do?’ I felt like’ I don’t want to do any fucking distress tolerance stuff like, I can’t!…Obviously you’re not understanding how distressed I am and this isn’t going to cover it, like this doesn’t even come close!" | |
| “I was just so pissed off with everything that I made sure I didn’t use my skills at all…I just threw all the skills out of the window. Because I just didn’t want to do anything…I’d just had enough.” |
Supporting quotes for Theme 3: A Personal Journey to a New Way of Life (N = 32).
| Sub-theme | Examples of Supporting Quotes |
|---|---|
|
| “It was a journey of going up and down, up and down… it’s trying to train yourself to do things that you don’t do……Sometimes you just get fucked off with trying, that you just can’t be assed anymore. …. Then you can kind of look back and think, ‘No, it did help’. And then you start again.” |
| “After three weeks I didn’t understand, I said ‘I’m not going on’…. And then after that I just started getting into it… so I recommend that anyone goes and just give it your best shot. Don’t give up too quickly.” | |
| “I remember getting quite upset because I’m thinking to myself, ‘I'm relying on this and I don’t have a clue what they’re going on about.’ …. but you just stick with it, and obviously the more times you go, the more familiar you get with the group.” | |
| “Mindfulness is a skill that you need to practise…. it got better incrementally… little steps” | |
| “[At the beginning I] didn’t understand it I suppose, just didn’t want to do it … I wouldn’t do my homework … but now, I just do it because I want to do it…. Because I know that I want to feel better” | |
| “I was weaned off [self-harm] though! I didn’t just suddenly quit. I couldn’t do that—I had to try skills, and then maybe I’ll stumble here and there and I’ll go back to it, and then I’ll have to try again” | |
|
| “I began to have favourite skills and less favourite ones and as soon as you start choosing what you like and what you don't like, it’s not something scary anymore. It’s almost your friend, your thing to turn to” |
|
| “Because I was so focused at trying to be perfect at it and making it making it work just as it should by the book, it was hindering the effectiveness of it … Since I've left and I've just had the skills in my head and in my mind, they just sort of click into place whenever I want to use them….. I’m just, I’m not so focused on doing everything exactly as it says in the manual”. |
| “When you’re in the group sessions… in your mind you kind of learn to associate what the lesson is about with what your own life, so then you can make notes to say ‘Oh like this’. And you read back through, so yeah, you understand exactly what it means to you” | |
| “Some of the skills are becoming second nature… I’m doing it sometimes without thinking about it.” | |
| “It becomes automatic and you use them so frequently that it just becomes a part of your day to day life” | |
| “The good thing about DBT is that skills become ingrained. Over that year, the more you do it the more it becomes a part of you, till you’re doing it without knowing you’re doing it……” |
A Comparison of Theme Endorsement by Treatment Completers and Treatment Dropouts.
| Domain | Theme | Sub-theme | Completers (N = 27) | Dropouts (N = 13) | Fisher’s Exact p value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Experiences of Barriers to Skills Training | Difficulties Learning the Skills: Too Much to Take In | Anxiety during the Skills Groups | 14 (52%) | 1 (85%) | 0.05 |
| Difficulties With the Presentation of the Skills Material | 19 (70%) | 6 (46%) | 0.13 | ||
| Difficulties Putting the Skills into Practice: Overwhelming Emotions | Loss of Control | 17 (63%) | 8 (62%) | 0.60 | |
| Negative Thoughts about the Skills | 22 (81%) | 11 (85%) | 0.60 | ||
| Experiences of Overcoming Barriers to Skills Training | A Personal Journey to a New Way of Life | A Commitment to Keep Working Towards Change | 24 (89%) | 7 (54%) | 0.02 |
| Making the Skills My Own | 12 (44%) | 2 (15%) | 0.07 | ||
| Using the Skills Becomes Automatic | 15 (56%) | 2 (15%) | 0.02 | ||
| An Environment that Supports Change | The Skills Group | 20 (74%) | 5 (38%) | 0.03 | |
| The Individual Therapist | 24 (89%) | 5 (38%) | 0.01 | ||
| Friends and Family | 12 (44%) | 2 (15%) | 0.07 |