Title: Mindfulness Skills
1Mindfulness Skills Psychological Flexibility
with distressing voices
- Eric Morris, Emmanuelle Peters Philippa Garety
- Institute of Psychiatry, Kings College London
- South London Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust
2ACT, 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
3Voice 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
4Relationship 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
5Focus 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?
6Psychological Flexibility
Behavioural Responses to voices
Perceived power of voices
Distress Disruption
7Measuring 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
8Design 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)
9Demographics
- 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)
10Measures
- 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)
11Descriptives 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)
12Psychological 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
13Data 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
14Appraisals 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
15Amount 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
16Life 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)
17Responding 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
18General 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
19Summary 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.
20Study 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
21Clinical 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