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Mindfulness Skills

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Title: Mindfulness Skills


1
Mindfulness Skills Psychological Flexibility
with distressing voices
  • Eric Morris, Emmanuelle Peters Philippa Garety
  • Institute of Psychiatry, Kings College London
  • South London Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust

2
ACT, mindfulness and psychosis
  • Acceptance based approaches focus on changing the
    relationship to thoughts and feelings (rather
    than directly changing content) to increase
    behavioural flexibility
  • Some preliminary evidence with psychosis (e.g.,
    Bach Hayes, 2002 Chadwick, Newman Taylor
    Abba, 2005 Gaudiano Herbert, 2006)
  • Models consider distress and disability resulting
    from experiential avoidance, over-literality
    about thoughts/experiences, inability to persist
    with valued actions

3
Voice hearing and distress/disability
  • Cognitive models suggest that distress and
    disability associated with voices is partly a
    function of appraisals of voice power and
    intentions (e.g., Chadwick Birchwood, 1994
    Beck Rector, 2003)
  • Acceptance models, in addition, consider how
    people relate to appraisals in general (fused
    literality vs observing, mindful), with the aim
    of finding ways to influence this relating

4
Relationship of experiential avoidance with
psychosis?
  • Indirect evidence suggesting this
  • people who cope poorly with voices tend to rely
    largely upon distraction and thought-suppression
    strategies (Romme and Escher, 1993).
  • suppression-based coping strategies may
    exacerbate intrusive thoughts, psychological
    distress, autonomic arousal, and auditory
    hallucinations (Morrison, Haddock and Tarrier,
    1995).
  • Interventions based on distraction when compared
    to focusing (Haddock et al., 1998) appear to come
    at personal cost with poorer outcomes for self
    esteem during treatment

5
Focus of the current study
  • What relationships are there between
    psychological flexibility, mindfulness skills and
    previously found predictors of distress and
    disability in voice hearing?
  • Does acceptance and mindfulness have any
    additional predictive power?

6
Psychological Flexibility
Behavioural Responses to voices
Perceived power of voices
Distress Disruption
7
Measuring Psychological Flexibility Mindfulness
  • Acceptance and Action Questionnaire II (Bond et
    al, submitted)
  • Measures experiential avoidance/ acceptance and
    willingness (based on ACT constructs)
  • Kentucky Inventory of Mindfulness Skills (Baer,
    Smith Allen, 2004)
  • Measures skills in mindfulness, based on DBT
    constructs Observe, Describe, Act with
    Awareness, Accept Without Judgement

8
Design Participants
  • Using a cross-sectional design, involving the
    participation of distressed voice hearers (N
    50)
  • Diagnosed with mental illness and receiving
    treatment for auditory hallucinations
  • Recruited from community (N35) and inpatient
    settings (N15)

9
Demographics
  • 33 male, 17 female
  • Mean age 31.8 (range 18 56)
  • Mean length of time hearing voices 9 years
    (range 3 months 33 years)
  • Chart ICD Diagnoses
  • F20 F29 45 (90)
  • Mood disorder F30 39 5 (10)
  • Prescribed current medication for psychosis 47
    (94)
  • Ethnicity White 18 (36), Black 22 (44),
    Mixed 4 (8), Asian 3 (6), Other 3 (6)
  • Employment Unemployed 37 (74), student 7 (14),
    Employed p/t 3 (6), Employed f/t 3 (6)

10
Measures
  • Psychological flexibility Mindfulness (AAQ-II
    KIMS)
  • Voice Appraisals Beliefs about Voices
    Questionnaire- Revised (Chadwick, Lees
    Birchwood, 2000)
  • General Distress - BDI BAI
  • Coping with thoughts - Thought Control
    Questionnaire (Wells Davies, 1994)
  • Multidimensional assessment of voices -
    PSYRATS-auditory hallucinations subscale (Haddock
    et al., 1999)

11
Descriptives for sample
Mean s.d. Range (Total)
PSYRATS-AH 29.7 4.7 17 39 (44)
BDI 22.4 11.9 0 52 (63)
BAI 23.4 13.8 3 55 (63)
AAQ-II 37.2 8.2 22 58 (70)
KIMS-Accept w/o judgement 24.8 8.0 11 45 (45)
Omnipotence 10.4 3.8 0 17 (18)
Benevolence 4.3 4.6 0 16 (18)
Malevolence 9.6 4.1 0 17 ( 18)
Resistance (behavioural) 10.4 3.9 2 15 (15)
TCQ Punishment 12.4 3.5 6 20 ( 24)
TCQ Re-appraisal 14.4 3.5 6 20 (24)
12
Psychological flexibility (AAQ-II) Pearsons Correlation Sig.
Depression -.65 p lt .001
Anxiety -.48 p lt .001
KIMS Accept Without Judgement .53 p lt .001
Acceptance without judgement (KIMS)
Depression -.40 p lt .01
Anxiety -.38 p lt .01
Thought Control Punishment -.59 p lt .001
Thought Control Re-appraisal -.44 p lt .01
Voice Omnipotence -.41 p lt .01
Resistance to voices (behavioural) -.45 p lt .001
13
Data analysis strategy
  • To assess the study questions a series of
    hierarchical regression analyses were conducted
  • Independent variables were chosen on the basis of
    correlation statistical significance with the
    dependent variable, and entered in Step 1
  • Then as Step 2 the KIMS (Acceptance) and AAQ-II
    (Psychological Flexibility) variables were entered

14
Appraisals of omnipotence
Model Predictors ? AdjustedR2 p
1 Appraisals Malevolence Benevolence .48 .50 .30 .001
2 Appraisals Acceptance Malevolence Benevolence Acceptance (KIMS) Psych Flex (AAQ) .48 .48 -.39 -.01 .43 F change p lt .01
15
Amount of voice distress
Model Predictors ? AdjustedR2 p
1 Malevolence Degree of ve content Behavioural resistance .26 .14 .20 .15 .05
2 Adding Acceptance Malevolence Degree of ve content Behavioural resistance Acceptance (KIMS) Psych Flexibility (AAQ) .20 .04 .35 -.32 -.44 .26 F change plt .05
16
Life disruption from voices
Model Predictors ? AdjustedR2 p
1 Degree of ve content Omnipotence .33 .27 .16 .01
2 Adding Acceptance Degree of ve content Omnipotence Acceptance (KIMS) Psych Flexibility (AAQ) .24 .37 -.38 -.24 .23 F change n.s. (.07)
17
Responding to voices
Dependent variable Predictors ? AdjustedR2 p
Behavioural Resistance 1 Omnipotence Thoughts Punishment Malevolence .26 .24 .23 .27 lt.001
2 Adding Acceptance Omnipotence Thoughts Punishment Malevolence Acceptance (KIMS) Psych Flexibility (AAQ) .14 .01 .14 -.39 -.05 .36 F change n.s. (.06)

Behavioural Engagement Benevolence .65 .43 lt.001
18
General distress (BDIBAI)
Model Predictors ? AdjustedR2 p
1 Omnipotence ThoughtsPunishment .07 .45 .20 .01
2 Adding Acceptance Omnipotence ThoughtsPunishment Acceptance (KIMS) Psych Flexibility (AAQ) -.01 .33 .02 -.54 .44 F change p lt .001
19
Summary of Results
  • Acceptance and psychological flexibility add
    modest predictive power for
  • general distress,
  • voice-specific amount of distress,
  • and appraisals of omnipotence.
  • when combined with previously identified
    independent variables in cognitive models.
  • Non-significant, but trend, relationships for
    predicting disruption and resistance to voices.

20
Study limitations
  • Cross-sectional design
  • Sample (distressed voice hearers)
  • Use of general measures of mindfulness and
    psychological flexibility (compared to symptom
    specific measures, e.g. Voices Acceptance and
    Action Scale Shawyer et al., 2007)
  • Less contextual measures

21
Clinical Implications/Questions
  • What does the AAQ-2 measure?
  • There may be some modest predictive power in
    incorporating mindfulness and acceptance for
    understanding some aspects of distressed voice
    hearing (taking just a predictive model stance)
  • But from a functional contextual stance we are
    also looking for variables to influence, not
    simply explain
  • ACT model suggests that non-judgemental awareness
    of experiences is a skill that can be taught
    can this be done with distressed voice hearers
    and does it allow them to have greater response
    flexibility?

22
Eric.Morris_at_iop.kcl.ac.uk
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