Psychology Research and Behavior Management (Jan 2020)

Radically Open Dialectical Behavior Therapy: Social Signaling, Transdiagnostic Utility and Current Evidence

  • Gilbert K,
  • Hall K,
  • Codd RT

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 13
pp. 19 – 28

Abstract

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Kirsten Gilbert,1 Karyn Hall,2 R Trent Codd3 1Department of Psychiatry, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USA; 2Dialectical Behavior Therapies Center, Houston, TX, USA; 3Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy Center of Western North Carolina, Asheville, NC, USACorrespondence: Kirsten GilbertDepartment of Psychiatry, Washington University in St. Louis, 4444 Forest Park, Suite 2100, St. Louis, MO 63108, USATel +1 314-747-0001Fax +1 314-286-2732Email [email protected]: At the core of an overcontrolled personality and coping style is a tendency to have too much self-control, exhibiting as behavioral and cognitive inflexibility, high inhibition of emotion, high detail-focused processing and perfectionism, and a lack of social connectedness. Overcontrol underlies a wide variety of psychiatric illnesses and as such, an innovative transdiagnostic therapy called Radically Open Dialectical Behavior Therapy (RO DBT) has been developed to treat disorders characterized by overcontrol. RO DBT targets maladaptive social signaling in order to help individuals “rejoin the tribe,” hypothesizing that increasing social connectedness by means of targeting social signaling is the central mechanism of change in treatment. Because RO DBT is used for individuals with an overcontrolled personality style, rather than individual disordered symptoms, it can be used transdiagnostically across a range of comorbid disorders, including treatment-resistant depression and anxiety, anorexia nervosa, and personality disorders such as obsessive-compulsive personality disorder. The current article introduces this novel treatment approach and discusses its emphasis on social signaling and its transdiagnostic nature. We then provide the first review of existing literature testing the efficacy of RO DBT across clinical populations, discuss issues related to assessment of overcontrol, and speculate on future directions for this novel therapy.Keywords: radically open dialectical behavior therapy, overcontrol, transdiagnostic, psychological inflexibility

Keywords