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Description
A number of factors can make it difficult to define problematic behavior in skills training group as either therapy destroying or therapy interfering behavior (TIB). This complicates treatment planning and can greatly reduce the effectiveness of group. Participants will be invited to submit their own quandaries related to this issue before and during the discussion. A very brief overview of defining criteria and general approaches to therapy destroying and therapy interfering behavior will be given. Discussion will include: confounds in determining which type of behavior is being exhibited in group; approaches to defining tough-call behaviors; and an array of treatment planning options.
Learning Objective
As a result of this event participants will be able to describe strategies for effectively managing serious therapy interfering behaviors in skills training classes.
Virtual Meeting Details
Date: April 20th, 2020
Time: 8:00am – 9:00am Pacific / 11:00am – 12:00pm Eastern
Meeting Duration: 60 minutes
Registration Fee: $35.00
Participants will receive a Zoom meeting invite no later than 24 hours before the session. Please email support@behavioraltech.org if you do not receive an invite.
About Topic-Driven Discussions with DBT Experts
This session is one of our “Topic-Driven Discussions with DBT Experts” within the Chats with Trainers series. These discussions will offer a presentation + Q&A format for small groups of 20-25 participants, ideal for those who want to engage in an in-depth, focused conversation with the guidance of the Trainer’s expertise. Please note, CE credits will not be offered.
Columbia, MO (United States) Ronda Oswalt Reitz, Ph.D., is the Coordinator for Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) services for the Missouri Department of Mental Health. In this role, she is charged with the implementation, support, and evaluation of DBT programming in public mental health settings statewide. Dr. Reitz specializes in large-scale implementation of DBT and has developed comprehensive DBT programming in community mental health systems, inpatient hospitals, and in juvenile and adult forensic settings. Dr. Reitz is also a national trainer-consultant for Behavioral Tech, the treatment dissemination company founded by Dr. Marsha Linehan, the developer of DBT. Dr. Reitz is a graduate of the University of Kansas.
Participation Agreement:
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