DBT Progress Note Example PDF & Word

$5.99

DBT Session Notes Bundle (PDF & Word) – 415+ Clinical & Simple Language Examples for Therapists

This DBT Session Notes Bundle is the ultimate reference tool for therapists, counselors, and social workers seeking clear, organized, and professional examples for progress note writing. With over 415 session note examples across 22 pages, this resource is available in printable PDF and fully editable Word formats—perfect for quick reference, customization, or clinical inspiration.

Each note is written in both clinical and plain language, allowing you to adapt to your own documentation style or use as a teaching tool with supervisees, interns, or new clinicians.

✨ What’s Included:

🔹 22 Pages of Session Notes
🔹 415+ Examples in both clinical and simple language
🔹 Organized into 3 major categories, each with detailed subcategories for easy navigation:

🧩 DBT Skill Modules:

  • Mindfulness

  • Distress Tolerance

  • Emotion Regulation

  • Interpersonal Effectiveness

  • Walking the Middle Path

🛠️ DBT Interventions & Client Response:

  • Chain Analysis

  • Diary Card Review

  • Coaching on Skill Use

  • Validation

  • Commitment Strategies

  • Behavioral Rehearsal / Role Play

  • Problem Solving

  • Client Response

💡 Clinical Themes:

  • Trauma

  • Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD)

  • Substance Use

  • Anxiety

  • Eating Disorders

  • Suicidal Ideation / Self-Harm

  • Depression

  • Bipolar Disorder

  • Relationship Issues

✅ Key Features:

  • Over 415 real-world progress note examples

  • Covers a wide range of DBT content areas

  • Written in dual formats: clinical & simple language

  • PDF for easy printing or offline reference

  • Word version for editing, copying, or note customization

  • Great for documentation support, case consultation, or supervision use

Perfect for DBT-informed therapists, this bundle will save time, reduce documentation stress, and give you confident language for capturing client progress and skill use—while keeping the structure grounded in evidence-based DBT practice.

DBT Session Notes Bundle (PDF & Word) – 415+ Clinical & Simple Language Examples for Therapists

This DBT Session Notes Bundle is the ultimate reference tool for therapists, counselors, and social workers seeking clear, organized, and professional examples for progress note writing. With over 415 session note examples across 22 pages, this resource is available in printable PDF and fully editable Word formats—perfect for quick reference, customization, or clinical inspiration.

Each note is written in both clinical and plain language, allowing you to adapt to your own documentation style or use as a teaching tool with supervisees, interns, or new clinicians.

✨ What’s Included:

🔹 22 Pages of Session Notes
🔹 415+ Examples in both clinical and simple language
🔹 Organized into 3 major categories, each with detailed subcategories for easy navigation:

🧩 DBT Skill Modules:

  • Mindfulness

  • Distress Tolerance

  • Emotion Regulation

  • Interpersonal Effectiveness

  • Walking the Middle Path

🛠️ DBT Interventions & Client Response:

  • Chain Analysis

  • Diary Card Review

  • Coaching on Skill Use

  • Validation

  • Commitment Strategies

  • Behavioral Rehearsal / Role Play

  • Problem Solving

  • Client Response

💡 Clinical Themes:

  • Trauma

  • Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD)

  • Substance Use

  • Anxiety

  • Eating Disorders

  • Suicidal Ideation / Self-Harm

  • Depression

  • Bipolar Disorder

  • Relationship Issues

✅ Key Features:

  • Over 415 real-world progress note examples

  • Covers a wide range of DBT content areas

  • Written in dual formats: clinical & simple language

  • PDF for easy printing or offline reference

  • Word version for editing, copying, or note customization

  • Great for documentation support, case consultation, or supervision use

Perfect for DBT-informed therapists, this bundle will save time, reduce documentation stress, and give you confident language for capturing client progress and skill use—while keeping the structure grounded in evidence-based DBT practice.