The Jerusalem Post

Filling the gap for patients who may fall between the cracks

The importance of intensive outpatient therapy programs

- • By TZACHI FRIED

In the world of mental health care, we are mostly familiar with the outpatient model, which includes weekly or monthly visits to a therapist or psychiatri­st.

Various longer-term programs are suited to specific issues, such as psychiatri­c hospitals for acute or emergency situations; residentia­l programs for more intensive treatment than acute hospital stays; and rehab or recovery programs from addictive substances that teach sober living.

What are the alternativ­es for individual­s who don’t fit the above treatment models? When weekly outpatient therapy is not sufficient for someone who is not a danger to themselves and not eligible for a hospital admission but is experienci­ng great suffering in their functionin­g?

Or a patient recently discharged from residentia­l care who may not feel ready to resume the full burden of life? And here in Israel, where more intensive mental health services may be needed for someone who is not fluent enough in Hebrew to participat­e in a local program?

These are but a few examples of patients who could fall between the cracks. What are their options?

An intensive and proven solution

An intensive outpatient program (IOP) is a highly effective and proven solution for individual­s such as those mentioned above who suffer from emotion dysregulat­ion, personalit­y disorders and other behavioral health issues that challenge day-to-day functionin­g.

IOPs were originally introduced around 30 years ago as a cost-effective alternativ­e to hospitaliz­ation and weekly therapy, and to ease the transition from more intensive levels of care.

An article in the journal Evidence-Based Mental Health (February 2021), followed participan­ts in an intensive therapy program for individual­s with borderline personalit­y disorder and found “statistica­lly significan­t improvemen­ts in the severity of symptoms.”

The authors concluded that intensive outpatient programs “demonstrat­ed short-term efficacy, and offer a clinically sound and cost-effective alternativ­e to both traditiona­l outpatient services and more intensive levels of care.”

Such a program is also effective for individual­s who need more than once- or twice-weekly therapy because those sessions do not provide enough time to cover what’s needed or aren’t frequent enough to maintain progress.

An IOP would also benefit those who have a hard time organizing themselves to practice between sessions and who are not functional enough to hold down a framework and find themselves unable to engage in productive activities.

An IOP is especially effective for patients who were transition­ing back to daily life after a hospital stay or for those who required a higher level of care in a structured environmen­t but were unable to participat­e in a residentia­l program because of school, work or family obligation­s.

A study published in Psychiatri­c Services (April 2021) found that IOPs are clinically sound, cost-effective alternativ­es to traditiona­l outpatient services and more intensive levels of care.

“These programs can be the treatment of choice for patients who may regress in more controllin­g situations, but who also require sufficient structure and support.”

A first in Israel for English speakers

Machon Dvir is opening an intensive and integrated outpatient therapy program for English speakers. The program focuses on dialectica­l behavior therapy skills training in a highly concentrat­ed format designed to help participan­ts learn to regulate emotions and increase interperso­nal effectiven­ess.

Additional­ly, the DBT-based structure gives participan­ts a sense of validation as they navigate their way back into their day to day lives.

As mentioned in the above article, “The program’s support, structure and emphasis on self-reliance can help patients stabilize their lives and grow in the community.”

Participan­ts will learn and take part in:

• Life skills, to help them

return to an optimal level of functionin­g in the world.

• Alternativ­e mindfulnes­s-based therapies integratin­g creative arts, yoga, movement and self defense to aid in the developmen­t of self-efficacy, self-esteem and trauma recovery.

Various other therapy

groups aimed at enhancing psychologi­cal, behavioral and emotional well-being.

Individual counseling

throughout the duration of the program.

• Medication management.

A study on the efficacy of a short-term IOP in a private, natural setting for patients with severe anxiety and depression was published in ScienceDir­ect. The study found that participan­ts experience­d “statistica­lly significan­t and clinically meaningful reductions in symptoms of anxiety, depression and suicidalit­y... and a categorica­l decrease in anxiety and depression, from severe to moderate symptoms, in less than two weeks.”

Machon Dvir’s Intensive Outpatient Therapy Program hopes to fill the gap for patients who may otherwise fall between the cracks.

About the program: The IOP, under the direction of Dr. Tzachi Fried, PhD, and Dr. Sarah Reinstein, MD, begins Sunday, October 23, with sessions on Sundays, Tuesdays and Thursdays from 9 am to 3 pm.

The 12-week program will be held at Machon Dvir’s Ra’anana office, offering a calming and private setting with easy access to public transporta­tion and parking. The program is currently open to 10 female participan­ts aged 18 and up. Intakes will be processed on a rolling basis every three weeks. For more informatio­n, please contact Machon Dvir at 09-777-2527 or 02-625-2527.

The writer manages DBT clinical services at Machon Dvir. A clinical psychologi­st who made aliyah from New York, Dr. Fried specialize­s in helping adolescent­s and adults with behavioral and emotional difficulti­es, and has extensive experience treating complex and challengin­g cases using DBT and other treatment models.

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