Behavioural therapy for inter-episode bipolar symptoms: a multiple baseline case series evaluation
Kim Wright, Sandra Bucci, Iona Cairns, Barnaby D. Dunn, Steven Jones, Heather O’Mahen, Daniel Scott, Rod S. Taylor

TL;DR
A new behavioral therapy called STABILISE was tested for people with bipolar disorder who experience low mood or mood instability between episodes.
Contribution
The study introduces and evaluates a new behavioral therapy program (STABILISE) tailored for inter-episode bipolar symptoms.
Findings
All 12 participants completed the therapy and reported high satisfaction.
9 out of 12 participants showed an overall pattern of improvement in symptoms.
The therapy was found to be safe and feasible with no therapy-related adverse events.
Abstract
Between major affective episodes some people with bipolar disorder experience persistent low mood or mood instability. Here we report an initial evaluation of the STABILISE programme (ISRCTN19416314; registration date 01.02.23), an adaptation of individual behavioural therapy that includes concepts and techniques addressing emotion regulation designed to support people experiencing these inter-episode symptoms. This study aimed to evaluate the safety, feasibility and acceptability of the intervention and to explore whether the pattern of clinical change had potential for the intervention to be of benefit. Twelve individuals with inter-episode bipolar symptoms received the STABILISE therapy in a randomised, multiple baseline case series. Participants were randomly assigned to wait 3, 4 or 5 weeks before commencing treatment, which comprised up to 22 sessions up to 7 months. Measures of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBipolar Disorder and Treatment · Electroconvulsive Therapy Studies · Schizophrenia research and treatment
