39 research outputs found
Terapia Dialéctica Conductual: aplicaciones clínicas y evidencia empírica
La Terapia Dialéctica Conductual (TDC) es un
tratamiento desarrollado para pacientes con Trastorno
Límite de la Personalidad (TLP). En la TDC se
combinan técnicas de terapia de la conducta con
principios de aceptación de la realidad derivados
del Zen y de la filosofía dialéctica. La TDC es una
terapia multi-modal que incluye 4 componentes:
terapia individual, entrenamiento grupal en habilidades,
soporte telefónico y un grupo de consulta
para los terapeutas. Como lo demuestran
distintos ensayos clínicos controlados y aleatorizados,
la TDC es hoy en día el único tratamiento
para el TLP que ha sido suficientemente investigado
como para considerarse basado en la evidencia.
La TDC también ha sido adaptada para
el tratamiento de otras patologías vinculadas a la
disregulación emocional, lo que ha contribuido a
ampliar su aplicación a otras poblaciones clínicas.
En este sentido, el entrenamiento en habilidades
también se aplica como componente único de
tratamiento, acumulando cada vez más evidencia
en relación a su eficacia. En el presente artículo se
exponen los principios básicos de la terapia y se
realiza una revisión de sus aplicaciones clínicas y
así como de la evidencia empírica disponible hasta
el momentoDialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) is
a treatment developed for patients with
borderline personality disorder diagnosis (BPD).
DBT combines behavior therapy with reality
acceptance principles derived from Zen and
dialectical philosophy. DBT is a multi-modal
treatment with 4 components: individual
therapy, skills training, phone consultation and
consultation team for therapists. Today, there
are several randomized controlled clinical trials
proving enough evidence as to consider that DBT
is an empirically based treatment for BPD. DBT
has also been adapted for the treatment of other
clinical populations characterized by emotional
dysregulation. The skills training component
of the therapy has begin to be used as a standalone
treatmentent and evidence in regard to its
efficacy is still growing. In this article we resume
the principles and structure of DBT and review its
clinical applications and empirical dat
Early and delayed BPD diagnosis and its relationship to long-term remission in adulthood
Objective: To study long-term remission of borderline personality disorder (BPD) differentially by age of BPD diagnosis detectio
The Effectiveness of Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy in Primary Care and the Role of Depression Severity and Treatment Attendance
Altres ajuts: Acord transformatiu CRUE-CSICEvidence suggests the efficacy of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) to prevent depression relapse and decrease depressive symptoms during the acute phase. However, the effectiveness of MBCT in real-world heterogeneous samples treated in clinical health settings, including primary care, has received little attention. This study had two aims: (1) to evaluate the effectiveness of MBCT delivered in primary care considering pre-treatment depression scores and (2) to explore the role of participants' characteristics on symptom improvement. Data were obtained from 433 individuals who received MBCT. Participants completed the Personality Inventory for ICD-11 (PiCD) pretreatment and the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI-II) pre- and post-treatment. Sixty percent presented moderate-to-severe depression according to scores on the BDI-II, 18.1% presented mild depression, and 21.7% were in the non-depressed range. The severity of pre-treatment depressive symptoms was associated with outcomes. Most individuals who lacked depressive symptoms at baseline remained in the non-clinical range after the treatment. Those in the severe group benefited the most from the intervention, since 35.6% were considered recovered. Rates of deterioration ranged from 2.1 to 2.7%, depending on the depression-baseline scores. Depression severity at the entrance, attendance, and age, but not personality traits, appear to be related to symptom improvement. According to our results, MBCT can be effectively and safely delivered in primary care
Meditation practice is associated with a values-oriented life: the mediating role of decentering and mindfulness
Clarification of personal values and meditation practice has been associated in most meditation traditions and in academic texts. Both values-related behavior and meditation practice increases well-being, but their relationship has not been well studied. It has been suggested that values, together with self-regulation, psychological flexibility, and exposure, are key mechanisms of action in mindfulness. The aims of this study were to explore the association between meditation and values and to examine the processes involved in this relation. A sample of 235 meditation-naïve participants and 274 subjects with varying levels of experience in meditation practice completed an online assessment protocol composed of Five Facets of Mindfulness Questionnaire (FFMQ), Decentering Questionnaire (EQ), Valued Living Questionnaire (VLQ), and Engagement with Life Scale (ELS). Results revealed that daily meditators were more consistent, aware, and life-fulfilled about their values; moreover, these measures correlated with the mindfulness process and decentering. The relation between meditation practice and values-related behavior (assessed by the VLQ) was mediated by decentering. The association between meditation practice and Valued Living and Life Fulfillment (measured by the ELS) was mediated by the decentering, describing, and nonjudging dimensions of mindfulness. The findings in this study support the relation between meditation and personal values, mediated by the decentering, describing, and non-judging facets of mindfulness
Psychometric properties of the spanish version of the nonattachment scale (NAS) and its relationship with mindfulness, decentering, and mental health
Abstract Nonattachment is a Buddhism-rooted construct, which can be defined as the relative absence of fixation on ideas, images, or sensory objects, as well as an absence of internal pressure to get, hold, avoid, or change circumstances or experiences. The present study was aimed at exploring the psychometric properties of the Spanish version of the Nonattachment Scale (NAS) and at delimitating the relationship between the NAS and measures of mindfulness, decentering, and negative emotional symptoms. Pooling the NAS data from Spanish meditators (n = 335) and nonmeditators (n = 270), we performed an exploratory factor analysis and then estimated the fit of two competing models (one-factor model vs. one-factor model + method effects) via confirmatory factor analysis. Data analyses showed that the Spanish version of the NAS is unifactorial in nature and has excellent internal consistency. As expected, high (positive) significant correlations were found between NAS and mindfulness and decentering measures, as well as high significant (negative) relations between NAS and depression, anxiety, and stress scores. Positive relations were also observed between NAS and variables of meditation practice. Large differences among the meditative, nonmeditative, and clinical groups (n = 39 patients with borderline personality disorder) were observed regarding NAS scores. Scores on the NAS were significant predictors of negative emotional symptoms (depression, anxiety, and stress) and, especially, resilience. Furthermore, NAS provided a unique contribution in the regression models, going beyond mindfulness facets and decentering. In conclusion, the Spanish version of the NAS is a psychometrically sound instrument with a promising future in the field of mindfulness and meditation research and in clinical setting
Physical health, health care utilization and long-term quality of life in remitted and non-remitted bpd patients: A 10-year follow-up study in a spanish sample
Objectives: 1. To describe the prevalence of physical illnesses and use of medical resources in remitted and non-remitted BPD patients at 10 years. 2. To study the impact of current physical health and BPD remission on QOL in the long-term
Validation of the Spanish version of the borderline symptom list, short form (BSL-23)
Background: The Borderline Symptom List-23 (BSL-23) is a reliable and valid self-report instrument for assessing Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) severity. The psychometric properties of the original version have proven to be adequate. The aim of the present study was to validate the Spanish language version of the BSL-23. Methods: The BSL-23 was administered to 240 subjects with BPD diagnosis. Factor structure, reliability, test-retest stability, convergent validity, and sensitivity to change were analyzed. Results: The Spanish version of the BSL-23 replicates the one-factor structure of the original version. The scale has high reliability (Cronbach's alpha=.949), as well as good test-retest stability, which was checked in a subsample (n=74; r=.734; p<.01). The Spanish BSL-23 shows moderate to high correlations with depressive symptomatology, state and trait anxiety, hostility and impulsivity scores and BPD measures. The Spanish BSL-23 is able to discriminate among different levels of BPD severity and shows satisfactory sensitivity to change after treatment, which was verified by assessing change before and after 12 group sessions of Dialectical Behavioral Therapy in a subgroup of 31 subjects. Conclusions: Similar to the original BSL-23, the Spanish BSL-23 is a reliable and valid instrument for assessing BPD severity and sensitivity to change
Anxious and depressive symptoms and health-related quality of life in a cohort of people who recently attempted suicide: A network analysis
Suicide is an international health concern with immeasurable impact from the perspective of human and social suffering. Prior suicide attempts, anxious and depressive symptoms, and relatively lower health-related quality of life (HRQoL) are among the most replicated risk factors for suicide. Our goal was to visualize the distribution of these features and their interconnections with use of a network analysis approach in individuals who recently attempted suicide.IG thanks the support of the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (MCIN) (PI19/00954, PI23/00822) integrated into the Plan Nacional de I+D+I and cofinanced by the ISCIII-Subdirección General de Evaluación y confinanciado por la Unión Europea (FEDER, FSE, Next Generation EU/Plan de Recuperación Transformación y Resiliencia_PRTR); the Instituto de Salud Carlos III; the CIBER of Mental Health (CIBERSAM); and the Secretaria d'Universitats i Recerca del Departament d'Economia i Coneixement (2021 SGR 01358), CERCA Programme / Generalitat de Catalunya as well as the Fundació Clínic per la Recerca Biomèdica (Pons Bartran 2022-FRCB_PB1_2022).Peer reviewe
La Terapia Dialéctico Conductual para el tratamiento del Trastorno Límite de la Personalidad
La Terapia Dialéctico Conductual (TDC) ha sido creada por la Dra. Marsha Linehan, para el tratamiento de pacientes con intentos suicidas recurrentes y diagnóstico de Trastorno Limite de la Personalidad (TLP). Es un modelo terapéutico perteneciente a la “tercera ola” en psicoterapias cognitivas, puesto que se basa en las ciencias del comportamiento e incluye elementos de Mindfulness y de la filosofía dialéctica. En la actualidad la TDC es el tratamiento con mayor evidencia empírica para el TLP, demostrando ser efectiva en la reducción de varios problemas asociados a este trastorno, como ser: autolesiones, intentos de autoeliminación, ideación suicida, desesperanza, depresión y comportamientos asociados a la bulimia. El objetivo de este artículo es desarrollar los fundamentos teóricos y conceptuales básicos sobre los que se construye la TDC, y exponer sus principales directrices de tratamiento. También se establecen las principales diferencias con la terapia cognitivo – conductual standard.