Borderline Personality (BPD) Support Groups in Milwaukee, WI

There are no results for support groups in Milwaukee

Check out support groups located nearby or offering teletherapy in Wisconsin below.

More Groups Nearby

Adult DBT Group
DBT group is for adults who want to learn skills to help manage intense emotions, decrease impulsive behaviors and increase positive relationships with others. This group will focus on learning ways to change unwanted behaviors, emotions, thoughts, and events that ...
Photo of Natalie Hanson, Counselor in Milwaukee, WI
Hosted by Natalie Hanson
Counselor, MS, LPC, SAC-IT
Verified Verified
Group meets in Whitefish Bay, WI 53217
DBT group is for adults who want to learn skills to help manage intense emotions, decrease impulsive behaviors and increase positive relationships with others. This group will focus on learning ways to change unwanted behaviors, emotions, thoughts, and events that ...
(262) 287-0678 View (262) 287-0678
Simultaneous Adolescent DBT and Parent DBT Group
Our goal in running these co-current groups is to build a foundation of support and practice in DBT skills for family members. This structured 12 week group dives into learning ways to change unwanted behaviors, emotions, thoughts, and events that ...
Photo of Natalie Hanson, Counselor in Milwaukee, WI
Hosted by Natalie Hanson
Counselor, MS, LPC, SAC-IT
Verified Verified
Group meets in Whitefish Bay, WI 53217
Our goal in running these co-current groups is to build a foundation of support and practice in DBT skills for family members. This structured 12 week group dives into learning ways to change unwanted behaviors, emotions, thoughts, and events that ...
(262) 287-0678 View (262) 287-0678

See more therapy options for Milwaukee

Borderline Personality (BPD) Support Groups

What is the most successful approach to treating borderline personality disorder?

Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) is considered the gold standard of treatment for borderline personality disorder. An evidence-based treatment, it addresses the extreme emotional reactivity, the relationship difficulties, and the acts of self-harm that create so much distress for BPD patients. DBT is a comprehensive program that includes both regular individual psychotherapy sessions and weekly group sessions of skills training.

What happens in treatment of borderline personality disorder?

Treatment typically consists of weekly individual therapy sessions that last an hour and group skill-focused instructional sessions that may last up to two hours. Patients are typically given homework “assignments” in which they are asked to practice in their daily life the skills they acquire in therapy. Patients also keep a diary tracking their emotions and impulses as a way to know which situations are most problematic and to help them gain control over their own behavior. Difficult situations and feelings are typically reviewed in therapy sessions and more constructive solutions found.

What kinds of problems does BPD treatment help with?

DBT was initially developed to dampen the self-destructive impulses of chronically suicidal patients. It is now the treatment of choice for borderline personality disorder, a serious condition marked by extreme emotional reactivity, relationship instability, and self-injurious behaviors. Treatment of BPD helps patients tolerate the flux of emotions without acting on them, often with a specific focus on tolerating negative emotions. DBT addresses the core problems of BPD—fear of abandonment, low self-esteem, and impulsivity.

What is the goal of treatment in borderline personality disorder?

The goal of treatment for borderline personality disorder (BPD) is to relieve the extreme emotional distress that patients experience—to curb their emotional reactivity, to minimize their inclination to self-harm, and to reduce their impulsivity. Toward these ends, patients are not only taught an array of new coping skills and techniques for emotional regulation, they are given opportunities to practice them. Another major goal of treatment is interpersonal effectiveness; patients learn and problem-solve ways to effectively communicate in relationships, especially how to ask for what they need as a way to minimize hurt feelings.