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dbeet.com presents an upcoming DBT Skills app for children. Positioned around a playful “bee-themed” world, it aims to help kids learn skills related to Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT). The page emphasizes that the goal is not for children to avoid problems, but to learn how to handle emotional, interpersonal, and stress-related challenges with more skill and confidence. The product is currently in a Coming Soon stage, mainly offering “Join the Hive/Notify Me” launch notifications and early-access signup.
Based on the available content, the app is built around the four classic DBT skills modules: mindfulness, helping children focus on the present and notice their emotions; distress tolerance, learning how to avoid impulsive escalation in difficult situations and painful emotional states; emotion regulation, understanding the function of emotions and reducing vulnerability to distressing emotions; and interpersonal effectiveness, practicing healthy relationships, expressing needs, and saying no. The format is not live classes, recorded lessons, or 1v1 coaching, but planned in-app interactive learning. The page does not disclose specific lesson length, learning paths, practice frequency, parent-facing features, or assessment mechanisms.
At present, there is no visible information on pricing, subscription model, free trial, payment methods, or refund policy. It also does not state whether any certification or certificate is provided after completion. Instructor and organizational background information is also missing: the page mentions DBT techniques and lists several children’s DBT/CBT-related books as recommended reading, but does not explain which therapists, child development specialists, or clinical team designed the app content. As a result, more disclosure is still needed around professional credibility and safety boundaries.
The main advantage is its clear course direction. Target issues include anxiety, frequent fears, emotional outbursts, friendship difficulties, low self-esteem, negative self-talk, impulsivity, and self-control challenges. Its content framework is also consistent with common DBT modules. If the child-friendly interaction is well executed, it may be more engaging for kids than text-only workbooks. The downside is that the product has not launched yet, so its user experience, effectiveness, and privacy/security practices cannot be verified. It also does not clarify whether it is suitable for different age groups, whether parental involvement is required, or under what circumstances children should be referred to professional mental health services. It is better viewed as an emotional education support tool for parents to watch, rather than a replacement for diagnosis or treatment.
The page does not provide information about access from mainland China, app store availability by region, or payment methods, so its China accessibility status can only be marked as unknown. If it later depends on overseas app stores, Amazon, or international payments, users in China may face download and payment barriers. Alternatives include children’s DBT/CBT workbooks, mindfulness and emotion-management apps for children, school counseling services, and compliant offline child psychological counseling services. For children whose emotional difficulties are clearly affecting study, sleep, or safety, professional assessment should be prioritized.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on dbeet.com official site.
dbeet.com is an Unknown Education provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach dbeet.com directly.