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DBT for Substance Use Disorders

Live, Remote, Instructor-led
September 11 – 12, 203

Trainers: Nick L. Salsman, PhD, ABPP and Emily Cooney, PhD

Training Description

Purpose: This training addresses adaptations to standard DBT designed to fill the gaps in practice between the treatment and service needs of people with co-occuring mental and substance use disorders.

Content: This course provides in-depth training in Dialectical Behavior Therapy for individuals with substance use disorders (DBT-SUD). Orienting to what DBT-SUD is and how it differs from standard DBT will be addressed. The DBT-SUD treatment model, targets, and strategies are taught. The training will review how to teach skills specific to DBT-SUD.

Length & Schedule: This course consists of 8 modules for a total of 12 instructor-led hours. Each module includes reading and homework tasks. Total participant time required for each module is approximately 2.5-3 hours. For more information about the start and end time for this event, please refer to the schedule below.

For Whom: The course is intended for those who have prior knowledge of DBT, and who want to learn how to implement a DBT-SUD program. Participants should have either completed Dialectical Behavior Therapy
Foundational Training, Dialectical Behavior Therapy Intensive Training, or an equivalent alternative training before participating in this training.

Core Training Description

Individuals with co-occurring substance use disorders (SUDs) and mental disorders (i.e., co-occurring disorders or CODs) are in great need for effective treatment. SAMHSA (2020, p. ix) states, “People with SUDs are more likely than those without SUDs to have co-occurring mental disorders. Addiction counselors encounter clients with CODs as a rule, not an exception.” SAMHSA (2020, p. ix) goes on to state, “Serious gaps exist between the treatment and service needs of people with CODs and the actual care they receive. Many factors contribute to the gap, such as lack of awareness about and training in CODs by addiction counselors, as well as workforce factors like labor shortages and professional burnout.”

Dialectical Behavior Therapy for individuals with substance use disorders (DBT-SUD) has a growing evidence base as an efficacious treatment and can serve to fill the gaps in training in the treatment of individuals with CODs. It is a treatment that explicitly targets reducing provider burnout. DBT-SUD involves a set of strategies that can readily be learned by trained DBT providers. Further, DBT-SUD can be incorporated into existing SUD treatment structures and systems.

This course provides in-depth training in Dialectical Behavior Therapy for individuals with substance use disorders (DBT-SUD). Orienting to what DBT-SUD is and how it differs from standard DBT will be addressed. The DBT-SUD treatment model, targets, and strategies are taught.

The training will review how to teach skills specific to DBT-SUD. Additionally, the course will review how to apply standard DBT strategies including skills training, chain analysis and stylistic strategies to substance use behaviors. Clinical examples are used to illustrate procedures.

Participants will learn key teaching points for the DBT-SUD skills. Video and demonstrations of interventions are incorporated.

Primary Objective

As a result of this course participants will be able to implement adaptations of DBT for substance use disorders.

Learning Objectives

  1. Identify strategies that are used in both standard DBT and DBT-SUD
  2. Describe research evaluating DBT-SUD.
  3. Identify the necessary components for a DBT-SUD program that are unique from standard DBT.
  4. Apply decision-making tools on when to implement a DBT-SUD program.
  5. Assess how substance use behavior serves the function of solving a client’s problems.
  6. Identify some common physiological and behavioral responses of using a variety of substances.
  7. Identify effective strategies for assessing co-occurring substance use and other disorders of emotion regulation.
  8. Describe dialectical abstinence.
  9. Describe the abstinence violation effect.
  10. Identify key strategies in pretreatment in DBT-SUD.
  11. Target substance use behaviors during DBT-SUD.
  12. Describe the steps in the path to clear mind.
  13. List the attachment strategies utilized in DBT-SUD.
  14. Describe how ancillary treatments may be utilized in DBT-SUD
  15. Describe how drug screening may be utilized in DBT-SUD. 
  16. Describe the DBT skills for when the crisis is addiction.
  17. Describe the special considerations for how to effectively teach the standard DBT skills to clients in DBT-SUD. 
  18. Apply DBT chain analysis and solution analysis strategies to substance use behaviors.
  19. Describe the use of stylistic strategies in the context of DBT-SUD. 
  20. Use stylistic strategies such as irreverence.
  21. Describe how to treat therapy interfering behaviors in the context of DBT-SUD.
  22. Treat therapy interfering behaviors, including lying, in the context of DBT-SUD. 

Schedule

September 11 – 12, 203

7:00am – 2:30pm Pacific Time/9:00am – 4:30pm Central Time/10:00am – 5:30pm Eastern Time

Sign-in from 6:30am – 7:00am Pacific Time/8:30am – 9:00am Central Time/9:30am – 10:00am Eastern Time

Trainers

Nick L. Salsman, PhD, ABPP

Nick L. Salsman, PhD, ABPP Cincinnati, OH (United States)   Nick L. Salsman, PhD, ABPPNicholas L. Salsman, PhD, ABPP, is a professor of psychology at Xavier University where he is the director of the Xavier University Psychological Services Center and runs the Xavier University Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) program. Dr. Salsman is a fellow of the American Psychological Association, Society for Clinical Psychology. Dr. Salsman received his BA from Transylvania University and his PhD in clinical psychology from the University of Louisville. He completed an internship at the adult and child psychiatry departments of Vanderbilt University. He also served as a postdoctoral fellow and research associate for Dr. Marsha Linehan at the Behavioral Research and Therapy Clinics (BRTC) at the University of Washington from 2005-2007. While at the BRTC, he served as a DBT therapist on two large randomized clinical trials of DBT and an adherence coder on two research trials. He has published on topics including DBT, Borderline Personality Disorder, and emotion regulation. He has regularly given local, national, and international workshops, presentations, and invited talks on DBT, has consulted with and trained clinicians at various facilities, and trains and supervises doctoral clinical psychology students. Dr. Salsman has received grant funding to develop adaptations of DBT for older adults with complicated grieving and older adults with chronic pain. He is licensed as a psychologist in the state of Ohio.  

Emily Cooney, PhD

Emily Cooney, PhD (New Zealand) Emily  Cooney, PhDEmily Cooney, PhD, is a clinical psychologist who has worked in the US, the UK, and New Zealand with children and adults in a range of inpatient and outpatient settings, with a particular focus on Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT). She is co-director of the DBT and DBT for Substance Use Disorder teams for Yale-New Haven Psychiatric Hospital’s Adult Intensive Outpatient Program.  Emily served as a research therapist on two trials of DBT under Dr Marsha Linehan at the University of Washington, and was the principal investigator on two DBT feasibility trials in New Zealand.  One compared DBT with treatment as usual for self-harming adolescents, and the other was a field trial of DBT skills training for men with anger-related problems.  In addition to providing training in DBT via Behavioral Tech and DBTNZ, she also provides DBT adherence coding for the Linehan Board of Certification.  Her research interests include treatment outcome evaluation, adaptations of dialectical behavior therapy, family processes in treatment, and factors affecting therapist burnout and resilience.

Prerequisites

Participants are expected to have completed comprehensive DBT training, be currently engaged in the provision of DBT services, and want to learn how to implement a DBT-SUD program. As such, the training builds on an expectation that participants are well-versed in
the content of standard DBT. Specifically, participants should complete Dialectical Behavior Therapy Foundational Training, Dialectical Behavior Therapy Intensive Training, or an equivalent alternative training before participating in this training. before participating in this
training.

Participants should also have read Dr. Marsha Linehan’s Cognitive Behavioral Treatment of Borderline Personality Disorder and DBT Skills Training Manual, Second Edition.
Participants are also required to read the chapter, “Dialectical Behavior Therapy for Individuals with Borderline Personality Disorder and Substance Dependence”, in the book Dialectical Behavior Therapy in Clinical Practice: Applications Across Disorders and Settings (2019).

Preparation & Training Requirements
Participants should plan to complete the readings and homework assignments for each module of the course at the time that the module is presented.

Study Resources

Reading for DBT for Substance Use Disorders*

  • McMain, S., Dimeff, L. A., Sayrs, J., Linehan, M. M., & Koerner, K. (2021). Dialectical behavior therapy for individuals with BPD and substance dependence. In L. A. Dimeff & S. Rizvi (Eds.), Dialectical behavior therapy in clinical practice: Applications across disorders
    and settings (2nd ed.). The Guilford Press.

*Subject to change

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Tuition Information

  • Standard Tuition: $375 per participant (U.S. dollars)
  • Registration will close when all seats are sold, or on August 29, 2023 (final cut-off date).

IMPORTANT: Two weeks prior to the training, participants will receive an email from our Online Portal (powered by Thinkific) with a sign-in URL for this training. Please follow the instructions in the email to log in to our Online Portal and set your password, prior to Day 1 of the training.

Participants will retain access to the online course until 1 month after the last training session date. All course requirements must be completed before course access expires.

Please email support@behavioraltech.org if you have any questions about accessing your training.

Cancellations, Substitutions and Refunds
For a complete list of Behavioral Tech policies and limits of liability, see our Sales & Refund Policy page.

Technical Requirements

  • Our Online Portal (powered by Thinkific) will be used to host the live Zoom sessions and share supplemental materials. All Live-Remote Trainings require each participant to have:

Continuing Education

This offering meets the requirements for the following hours by discipline. Licensing and continuing education requirements vary by state. Please contact your state’s regulatory authority to verify if this course meets your licensing or continuing education requirements. Inquiries regarding CE for other disciplines not listed may be directed to Behavioral Tech at (206) 675-8589 or via email to support@behavioraltech.org. And for general CE questions, you can review answers to continuing education FAQs or contact us.

CE NOTE: Behavioral Tech calculates the continuing education credits for this training by the start time and end time. 100 percent attendance is required, as is signing IN and OUT each morning and afternoon, to receive CE credits. Only participants with 100% attendance, and who have completed the Post-Event Evaluation and passed their Final Exam with a score of 75% or higher will receive credit. Behavioral Tech cannot offer partial credit. Please remember to sign in and sign out each day to document your attendance. Continuing Education documentation will be emailed to you 4-6 weeks after the last day of training.

Alcohol and Drug Abuse Counselors (NAADAC)
Behavioral Tech will apply to NAADAC – the Association for Addiction Professionals, Provider #77431. Behavioral Tech, LLC is responsible for all aspects of the programming. You will receive a letter via email documenting your attendance upon successful completion of the activity. The allotted CE hours for this activity = 12.

Mental Health Counselors
Behavioral Tech is approved by an NBCC-Approved Continuing Education Provider (ACEP™) and may offer NBCC-approved clock hours for events that meet NBCC requirements. The ACEP solely is responsible for all aspects of the program.
Behavioral Tech will email you a letter documenting your attendance upon the successful completion of the activity. The allocated clock hours for this activity = 12.

Nurses
Behavioral Tech is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education to provide continuing medical education for physicians. Nurses should only claim credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity. Continuing Medical Education is accepted by the ANCC for nursing certification renewal. The maximum AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™ designated by Behavioral Tech for this activity = 12.

Psychiatrists
Behavioral Tech is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education to provide continuing medical education for physicians. Physicians should only claim credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity. The maximum AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™ designated by Behavioral Tech for this activity = 12.

Psychologists
Behavioral Tech is approved by the American Psychological Association to offer continuing education for psychologists. Behavioral Tech maintains responsibility for the program and its content. Behavioral Tech will email you a letter documenting your attendance after the successful completion of the program and homework. The number of hours Behavioral Tech has allocated within APA guidelines = 12.

Psychologists – New York
Behavioral Tech is recognized by the New York State Education Department’s State Board for Psychology as an approved provider of continuing education for licensed psychologists, #PSY-0063. Behavioral Tech will email a certificate of attendance upon 100% completion of this activity. The total contact hour allocated for this activity = 12.

Social Workers- Washington
Behavioral Tech will apply to the NASW, Washington State Chapter, Provider Number 1975-166, to offer continuing education for Certified Social Workers. Behavioral Tech will email a certificate of attendance upon 100% completion of this activity. The hours of CE allocated for this activity = 12.

Social Workers – New York
Behavioral Tech is approved by recognized by the New York State Education Department’s State Board for Social Work as an approved provider of continuing education for licensed social workers, #0040. Behavioral Tech will email a letter documenting attendance to participants with 100% completion of the program and homework. The hours allocated for this activity = 12.

General CE/CME Disclosures and Policies

Conflict of interest definition: A conflict of interest may be considered to exist if a continuing education course faculty is affiliated with, or has any significant financial interest, in any organization(s) that may have a direct interest in the subject matter of the presentation or may be co-sponsoring or offering financial support to the course. Situations involving a potential conflict of interest are not inherently bad or wrong, but in accordance with standards for continuing medical education we would like you to be aware of the affiliation/financial interest of your instructors.

Faculty Disclaimer: When an unlabelled use of a commercial product, or an investigative use not yet approved for any purpose is discussed during an educational activity, we shall require the speaker to disclose that the product is not labeled for the use under discussion or that the product is still investigative.

Notice of requirements for successful completion: For all trainings (both in-person and remote), participants must attend 100% of the training and complete the Final Evaluation to receive a certificate of successful completion. This includes signing in and out each day/session of the event. For remote, Instructor-led online training, participants have to pass the Post Assessment(s) with a score of 75% or higher.

Commercial support or sponsorship: There is no commercial company support for this CME/CE event.

Noncommercial Sponsor Support: There is no noncommercial sponsor support for this CME/CE activity.

Non-Endorsement of Products: The Behavioral Tech approval status refers only to continuing education activities and does not imply that there is real or implied endorsement of any product, service, or company referred to in this activity nor of any company subsidizing costs related to the activity.

Off-Label Product Use: This CME/CE activity does not include any unannounced information about off-label use of a product for a purpose other than that for which it was approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

Disclosure of Relevant Financial Relationships: Faculty members are required to disclose all conflicts of interest and any relevant financial relationships that may affect the training content. Unless specified on Behavioral Tech’s website or on other printed materials/media, none of the individuals in a position to control the content of this CE/CME activity (including planners, editors, CE/CME Review Committee members, faculty presenters, moderators/facilitators, reviewers, etc.) have any relevant financial relationships to disclose.

CE Reprint Policy: For missing/lost CE documentation, an administrative fee of $50 is required for all CE/CME activities after 2017. For CE reprints prior to 2017, please refer to the website or contact support@behavioraltech.org. Please refer to the CE FAQ webpage: https://behavioraltech.org/resources/faqs/continuing-education/.

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