Nancee Blum
Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine
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Featured researches published by Nancee Blum.
Archives of General Psychiatry | 1992
Donald W. Black; Russell Noyes; Risë B. Goldstein; Nancee Blum
First-degree relatives of probands with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) (n = 32) and psychiatrically normal controls (n = 33) were blindly interviewed with the use of the Diagnostic Interview Schedule. The morbidity risk for anxiety disorders was increased among the relatives of obsessional subjects compared with that for the relatives of controls, but the risk for OCD was not. Risk for a more broadly defined OCD (including relatives with obsessions and compulsions not meeting criteria for OCD) was increased among the parents of obsessional subjects but not among the parents of controls (16% vs 3%). The findings suggest that an anxiety disorder diathesis is transmitted in families with OCD, but that its expression within these families is variable. The findings also support the current practice of classifying OCD as an anxiety disorder.
Journal of Personality Disorders | 2009
Bruce Pfohl; Nancee Blum; Don St. John; Brett McCormick; Jeffrey A. Allen; Donald W. Black
A new self-rated scale to measure severity and change in persons with borderline personality disorder (BPD) is described. The Borderline Evaluation of Severity Over Time (BEST) was developed to rate the thoughts, emotions, and behaviors typical of BPD. Data were collected in the course of a randomized controlled trial (RCT) of Systems Training for Emotional Predictability and Problem Solving (STEPPS) for subjects with BPD. The instrument showed moderate test-retest reliability, high internal consistency, and high discriminant validity. Its 15 separate items showed a moderate or better correlation with the total score. The BEST was also sensitive to clinical change as early as week 4 of the RCT and correlated highly with other measures of illness severity. We conclude that the new scale is both reliable and valid in measuring severity and change in persons with BPD.
Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy | 2004
Donald W. Black; Nancee Blum; Bruce Pfohl; Don St. John
The authors describe a new cognitive-behavioral systems-based group treatment for outpatients diagnosed with borderline personality disorder (BPD). The program is identified by the acronym STEPPS, which stands for Systems Training for Emotional Predictability and Problem Solving. The STEPPS program was developed to address the cognitive distortions and behavioral dyscontrol typical of clients with BPD, and combines this with skills training and a systems component. The latter involves clients with BPD and those in their system including family members, significant others, and health care professionals. The program is fully manualized, and involves 20 two-hour weekly group meetings; specific goals (or lessons) are identified for each session. Preliminary data from the US and the Netherlands have shown that the group achieves high levels of acceptance from clients and therapists and that the model may be effective in helping to relieve the symptoms associated with BPD. Work is now underway to confirm the effectiveness of the model through a randomized controlled trial.
Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 2009
Donald W. Black; Jiang Allen; D. St. John; Bruce Pfohl; Brett McCormick; Nancee Blum
Objective: Few predictors of treatment outcome or early discontinuation have been identified in persons with borderline personality disorder (BPD).
Annals of Clinical Psychiatry | 2006
Bas Van Wel; Ina Kockmann; Nancee Blum; Bruce Pfohl; Donald W. Black; Wilma Heesterman
BACKGROUND Systems Training for Emotional Predictability and Problem Solving (STEPPS) is a new cognitive group treatment for outpatients with borderline personality disorder. METHODS The English and Dutch language literature was reviewed on the STEPPS program. RESULTS STEPPS was introduced in The Netherlands in 1998 under the acronym VERS. Reasons for its rapid dissemination throughout Holland include a user-friendly manual, its 20-week duration, ability to maintain the patients current treatment team, and ease of therapist training. Two pilot studies, one in the US and one in The Netherlands, suggest its efficacy. Randomized controlled trials are now underway. CONCLUSIONS STEPPS has become widespread in The Netherlands, and is now being modified for other settings, such as programs for adolescents.
Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 2013
Donald W. Black; Nancee Blum; Brett McCormick; Jeffrey A. Allen
Abstract Systems Training for Emotional Predictability and Problem Solving (STEPPS) is a manual-based group treatment of persons with borderline personality disorder (BPD). We report results from a study of offenders supervised by the Iowa Department of Corrections. Seventy-seven offenders participated in STEPPS groups. The offenders experienced clinically significant improvement in BPD-related symptoms (d = 1.30), mood, and negative affectivity. Suicidal behaviors and disciplinary infractions were reduced. Baseline severity was inversely associated with improvement. The offenders indicated satisfaction with STEPPS. We conclude that STEPPS can be successfully integrated into the care of offenders with BPD in prison and community corrections settings.
Archive | 2014
Renee Harvey; Nancee Blum; Donald W. Black; Jo Burgess; Paula Henley-Cragg
STEPPS (Systems Training for Emotional Predictability and Problem Solving) is a manualized, cognitive-behavioral, skills-based group treatment program originally developed in the USA for adults with borderline personality disorder (BPD) (Black, Blum, Pfohl, & St. John, 2004, 2012; Blum, Bartels, St. John, & Pfohl, 2002); the manual was also adapted for use in the UK (Blum, Bartels, St. John, & Pfohl, 2009), and the program is widely used in the Netherlands under the title VERS (Van Wel et al., 2006). The program is evidence based, as designated by the National Registry for Evidence-Based Practices (NREPP 2012). Although it was originally conceptualized as an outpatient program, STEPPS has been successfully adapted and implemented in a variety of settings, including inpatient units, partial hospital, day treatment programs, residential treatment facilities, substance abuse treatment, and correctional settings, including both male and female offenders in prisons and community corrections. In this chapter, an adaptation of STEPPS for adolescents in the UK will be described.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2013
Donald W. Black; Amanda Stumpf; Brett McCormick; Jeff Allen; Nancee Blum; Russell Noyes
We present results from a re-analysis of the Iowa family study of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) that previously concluded the disorder was not familial. These conclusions were based on Diagnostic Interview Schedule results of first-degree relatives (FDRs) and not a best estimate diagnosis (BED). For the re-analysis we reviewed raw data on OCD and control probands and their FDRs. Relatives had been assessed through structured interviews, validated questionnaires, family history, and medical records in some cases. BEDs were assigned through a blind consensus procedure employing DSM-IV criteria. The data were analyzed using logistic regression with generalized estimating equations to account for within family correlations. BEDs were assigned to 32 OCD probands, 31 control probands, and 352 FDRs, including 249 FDRs who were interviewed directly and 103 FDRs who were unavailable or deceased. Lifetime prevalence of definite/probable OCD was significantly higher in the FDRs of OCD probands than controls (10.7% vs. 3.8%, OR=3.04, p=0.026). FDRs of OCD probands had significantly higher rates of depressive illness than relatives of controls. Depression of any type in relatives was predicted by the probands depression history. We conclude that OCD is familial. The re-analysis highlights the importance of the BED procedure in family studies.
Comprehensive Psychiatry | 2014
Roberta Alesiani; Silvia Boccalon; Laura Giarolli; Nancee Blum; Andrea Fossati
In this study we present a clinical application of the STEPPS model in an Italian sample of severely affected patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD) or personality disorder (PD) with prominent borderline features in comorbidity with a mood disorder. The aims of this work are: 1) to confirm our preliminary results in a larger sample and at a 12-month follow-up, and 2) to identify predictors of drop-out vs completion of STEPPS in order to understand which characteristics of patients make them suitable or not for this treatment. The sample is composed of 32 subjects recruited from a population of inpatients of the Mood Disorders Center, Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Hospital San Raffaele-Turro, Milan. To confirm STEPPS efficacy at 12-month follow-up, we selected the following outcome criteria: reduction in the number of hospitalizations related to self-harm acts; reduction in the number of suicidal attempts; reduction of perceived emotional intensity levels; changes in cognitive filter scores; changes in the scores on self-report questionnaires. To identify predictors of drop-out vs completion, we analysed the following variables: demographic features (sex, marital status, school level achieved, and job status); Axis-I diagnosis; Axis-II categorical and dimensional diagnosis; and personality features. Seventeen (53%) subjects completed the treatment successfully. The drop-out rate was 47%. Patients who completed the program show a significant decrease in the number of hospitalizations, both at the end of the treatment and at 12-month follow-up. Friedman ANOVA test shows a significant decrease in suicidal attempts during and after STEPPS, and at 12-month follow-up. Analysis of drop-outs showed no significant differences with regard to sex, marital status, school level and job status between the two groups. Axis-I and Axis-II categorical diagnoses did not discriminate between the two groups. Those patients who dropped differ significantly from completers in histrionic personality traits and magical thinking index, given by the interaction between low scores in Self-Directedness and high scores in Self-Transcendence.
Personality and Mental Health | 2016
Donald W. Black; Fatma Simsek-Duran; Nancee Blum; Brett McCormick; Jeff Allen
Systems Training for Emotional Predictability and Problem Solving (STEPPS) is a group treatment for persons with borderline personality disorder (BPD). We describe results from two data sets on outcome in persons who participated in STEPPS with BPD alone or BPD plus antisocial personality disorder (ASPD). In Study 1, we examined the effect of comorbid ASPD on outcome in 65 persons with BPD who participated in a randomized controlled trial at an academic medical centre. In Study 2, we examined the effect of comorbid ASPD on outcome in 64 offenders with BPD who participated in STEPPS in correctional settings. All subjects were assessed for the presence of BPD and ASPD. In Study 1, subjects with ASPD experienced greater improvement in BPD symptoms, impulsiveness and global symptoms. In Study 2, offenders with ASPD experienced greater improvement in positive and negative behaviours and positive affectivity. We conclude that persons with BPD plus ASPD benefit from STEPPS in community and correctional settings. The findings suggest that persons with BPD plus ASPD show greater improvement in some domains than persons with BPD only. People with ASPD should not be automatically excluded from participation in the program. Copyright