Primary Alivedialectical Behavioral Training

  1. Dialectical Behavioral Therapy Certification
  2. Primary Alivedialectical Behavioral Training Techniques

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Dennis Mohatt

Primary

Dialectical Behavioral Therapy Certification

Vice President, Behavioral Health & Co-Director, Mental Health Technology Transfer Center

Dennis Mohatt is vice president for behavioral health at WICHE, leading since 2001 its behavioral health program and its Center for Rural Mental Health Research. He has over 30 years of public mental health service. His work has included direct clinical care, clinical supervision, and CEO tenure in a rural CMHC serving Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. Additionally, he led a HRSA-funded effort in the early 1990s to successfully integrate mental health and primary care in multiple rural family practice settings. During the late 1990s, he was deputy director for the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services, also serving as the state’s commissioner of mental health. He has served as a member of the National Rural Health Advisory Committee, and led national efforts relating to rural mental health including a role as chief consultant to the president’s New Freedom Commission on Mental Health. He is actively engaged in efforts focused on improving services to Veterans, Guard, and Reserve and their families; rural mental health policy; workforce development, and increasing adoption of integrated approaches to behavioral and primary care practice. His graduate training, supported by a NIMH Fellowship, focused on rural community-clinical psychology.

Primary Alivedialectical Behavioral Training Techniques

As a community dedicated to helping those with autism and other disorders, it’s important to understand that it really does take a village to help individuals manage their behavioral challenges.
No ONE person, no matter how well-trained, can provide the support that these individuals need to thrive. Yet, the more people that your organization recruits to help provide Applied Behavior Analysis Therapy (ABA), the more likely it is that mistakes will be made and progress will be hindered. That’s why it’s so essential that support staff receive the proper training!
But how should we be training support staff? How can you ensure that each player on your team is equipped with the skills to make a real difference in the lives of those who really need it?
This blog post will provide a simple evidence-based 6-step training procedure proven to help support staff provide quality care for those on the autistic spectrum:

Step 1: Why is This Skill Important?

Alivedialectical

Have you ever been forced to learn a skill when you didn’t understand why you were learning it? It’s not easy! High School Algebra comes to mind for me.
Before you start training your support staff in a specific ABA skill, make sure that they understand why they need to know it. Describe exactly what they will learn, and exactly how it will benefit the patients that they’re helping.

Step 2: Put it in Writing

Developing specific ABA skills can take a lot of time and effort. For many support staff, it can be very helpful to provide a succinct written description of the skill that you’re trying to teach them, and how those skills will improve the lives of their patients.
Remember… this simple written reference should be short, succinct, and easy to read! While a longer (and more complex) document might provide more information on the skill that they’re trying to learn, they probably won’t read it… at least they won’t refer to it as often as they should.

Step 3: Show the Skill in Action

While spoken and written instructions are essential, the easiest way for people to absorb a new skill is to simply see it in action.
Stage a role-play session in which a skilled trainer interacts with a staff member playing the role of a behaviorally challenged patient.
Trainers should “freeze” at certain points to highlight specific details of the approach, so that the trainees can more easily absorb what’s being taught.

Step 4: Practice Makes Perfect

Support staff training should never end with a scripted training session! Instead, provide your staff with opportunities to practice their new skill in a controlled role-play environment, so that they can master the skill before they need it in a real patient scenario.
This practice component requires a lot of time (so many skip it), but you should find the time to allow your staff to practice their skills. Observing these valuable practice sessions is the ONLY way to ensure that your staff is equipped to serve your patients.

Step 5: Provide Feedback

Some of the skills required in effective behavioral analysis therapy can take years to master! Chances are, your staff won’t get it right in their first run through. Be sure to provide regular feedback during each and every practice session, so that you and your trainees can identify common mistakes early, and immediately work to improve upon them.

Primary Alivedialectical Behavioral Training

Step 6: Repeat Steps 4 and 5 to Mastery

Primary Alivedialectical Behavioral Training

As time consuming as staff training can be, it’s well worth the time and effort that you put into it. Be sure to repeat your practice sessions, and continue providing helpful feedback, so that the skills that you’re trying to teach have time to sink in.

Putting Your Training into Action

No matter how robust your training programs are, each patient will bring unique challenges to the table. To help your staff learn to manage the case-by-case challenges of ABA therapy, provide regular on-the-job assessments for each of your staff, so that they can learn from real world feedback on their skills.
Ultimately, the MOST important thing is to provide each and every patient suffering from behavioral challenges with the best possible care. Support staff training should not be an afterthought. Apply the steps provided in this post, and you WILL see measurable progress in the people you’re helping.
The steps and procedures outlined in this article were drawn from an academic article called Evidence-Based Staff Training: A Guide for Practitioners. Click here to read the article, and understand all of the nuances of this 6-step training method!