H
Heidi L. Heard
Researcher at University of Washington
Publications - 10
Citations - 5495
Heidi L. Heard is an academic researcher from University of Washington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Borderline personality disorder & Dialectical behavior therapy. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 10 publications receiving 5219 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Cognitive-Behavioral Treatment of Chronically Parasuicidal Borderline Patients
TL;DR: Subjects who received dialectical behavior therapy had fewer incidences of parasuicide and less medically severe parasuicides, were more likely to stay in individual therapy, and had fewer inpatient psychiatric days.
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Two-Year Randomized Controlled Trial and Follow-up of Dialectical Behavior Therapy vs Therapy by Experts for Suicidal Behaviors and Borderline Personality Disorder
Marsha M. Linehan,Katherine Anne Comtois,Angela Murray,Milton Z. Brown,Robert Gallop,Heidi L. Heard,Kathryn E. Korslund,Darren A. Tutek,Sarah K. Reynolds,Noam Lindenboim +9 more
TL;DR: In this article, Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) was shown to be more effective in reducing suicidal behavior and borderline personality disorder compared with non-behavioral psychotherapy experts.
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Naturalistic follow-up of a behavioral treatment for chronically parasuicidal borderline patients.
TL;DR: The superiority of DBT over treatment-as-usual, found in previous studies at the completion of 1 year of treatment, was retained during a 1-year follow-up.
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Interpersonal outcome of cognitive behavioral treatment for chronically suicidal borderline patients
TL;DR: The results suggest that dialectical behavior therapy is a promising psychosocial intervention for improving interpersonal functioning among severely dysfunctional patients with borderline personality disorder.
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Suicide Attempt Self-Injury Interview (SASII): Development, Reliability, and Validity of a Scale to Assess Suicide Attempts and Intentional Self-Injury
TL;DR: The authors describe the development of the Suicide Attempt Self-Injury Interview (SASII), an instrument designed to assess the factors involved in nonfatal suicide attempts and intentional self-injury, and found to have very good interrater reliability and adequate validity.