Title: A Therapeutic Exchange Acceptance and Commitment Therapy ACT
1A Therapeutic ExchangeAcceptance and Commitment
Therapy (ACT)
- Mark Webster
- Psychotherapist
- Personality Disorders and Addictions
2Overview
- Background
- Theory
- Aims of ACT
- Research
3ACT History
- ACT is part of CBT New Wave
- ACT is grounded in 25 years of basic research
- ACT emerges from Relational Frame Theory, over
400 published papers - Promising evidence- 11 RCTs in last two years
- ACT increasingly applied to a wide range of
complicated psychological disorders - Flexible interventions
4Relational Frame Theory (RFT)
- How can you turn the screw?
Pliable
Plastic
Melts
Forms a shape
Cools
Hardens
Leverage
5Relations
Transformation of Functions
6Example
7Clinical example an obsessive-compulsive client
who avoided a carpeted area in her bedroom
- A mild insecticide had been used on a tree in the
front garden - She saw an insect in her garage and thought that
it might have been on the tree - Paint cans were stored in that corner of the
garage - When workmen painted her bedroom, they set paint
cans in a cardboard box on the carpet, and - She concluded that the carpet was contaminated
with the insecticide!
8toxic
toxic
toxic
toxic
toxic
toxic
9Human Suffering is Ubiquitous
- Normal psychological processes are destructive
- We need to understand these processes and work
within them to promote health - Nominee human language and cognition
- WORDS cause PAIN
- EXPERIENTIAL AVOIDANCE!
10Experiential Avoidance
- Experiential avoidance (EA) is built into human
language - Experiential avoidance is the tendency to attempt
to alter the form, frequency, or situational
sensitivity of historically produced negative
private experience (emotions, thoughts, bodily
sensations) even when attempts to do so cause
psychological and behavioral harm - Experiential Avoidance is amplified by the
culture
11Experiential Avoidance is Harmful
- Coping styles literature
- Psychotherapy process literature
- Thought suppression literature
- Emotional suppression literature
- Psychopathology literature
- Linked to other several behaviors such as
violence and suicide - Psychotherapy outcome literature
12Experiential Avoidance is Harmful
- Higher experiential avoidance is associated with
- Higher anxiety
- More depression
- More overall pathology
- History of sexual abuse
- High risk sexual behavior
- Substance abuse
- BPD symptomatology and depression
- Thought suppression
- Alexithymia
- Anxiety sensitivity
Sources Hayes et al (under submission) Polusny
(1997) Toarmino (1998) Pistorello (1997)
Batten, Follette, Aban (1998) Stewart,
Zvolensky, Eifert (1998)
13Experiential Avoidance is Harmful
- Thought and emotional suppression is often
counterproductive
Suppress
Accept
Source Walser (1998)
14Experiential Avoidance is Harmful
- Thought and emotional suppression is often
counterproductive - This coping strategy is associated with
psychopathology
- Examples
- Panic
- PTSD
- Depression
- OCD
- Suicide
Source Hayes, Wilson, Gifford, Follette,
Strosahl (1996)
15- The Goals and Components of ACT
- Undermine experiential avoidance
- Creative hopelessness
- Control is the problem
- Provide alternatives
- Acceptance
- Exposure
- Contact with the present moment
16Outcome Research
- Psychosis
- Addiction
- Stigma
- Workplace Stress
- Epilepsy
- Primary Care- Depression, Anxiety, Smoking
Cessation, Chronic Pain, OCD, Diabetes
17Coping with Psychotic Symptoms Bach Hayes,
JCCP, 2002
- Could this work even with the most horrifying
forms of private events? - 80 Ss hospitalized with hallucinations and/or
delusions randomized to either ACT or TAU - 3 hours of ACT all but one session in-patient
- ACT intervention focused on acceptance and
defusion from hallucinations / delusions
18Impact on Rehospitalization
1.0
.9
.8
Proportion Not Hospitalized
.7
.6
40
80
120
Days After Initial Release
19Process of ChangeBelievability
80
Level 2 process evidence
Control
Literal Believability of Psychotic Symptoms
(0-100)
60
ACT
40
Pre
F-up
Phase
20Coping with Psychosis 2Gaudiano Herbert,
BRAT, in press
- Psychotic inpatients (n 42)
- ACT vs. Enhanced TAU
- 29 Homeless, only 12 with own home
- 86 Unemployed
- 58 Substance Misuse comorbid
- 82 Medical condition
21Rehospitalization
100
ACT
90
80
70
Not Readmitted
ETAU
60
50
40
Post
4 mo Follow Up
Phase
22Hallucination Distress
8
ETAU
7
Hallucination Distress (1-10)
6
ACT
5
Pre
Post
Phase
23Severe Substance Abuse Hayes et al., Behavior
Therapy, 2004
- 124 abusing multiple drugs within the last 30
days while on methadone maintenance - Three conditions (RCT)
- ACT methadone maintenance
- ITSF methadone maintenance
- Methadone maintenance
24Subjectively Assessed Total Drug
Percentage Negative QAs
Post
6 Mo Follow Up
Pre
Phase
25Stigma Toward Our ClientsHayes et al, Behavior
Therapy, 2004 (Nevada PIC, SAMHSA funded)
- 90 drug counselors randomly assigned to day long
workshop on - ACT
- Multicultural training
- Class on biological models of SA
- 3 Month Follow-up
26Effects on Stigma
Control
Multicultural
ACT
27Change in Burnout
Education
ACT
Multicultural
4
0
-4
Pre- Post
Pre- F-up
Pre- Post
Pre- F-up
Pre- Post
Pre- F-up
28Worksite Stress and Innovation Bond Bunce,
IJOHP, 2000
- Study done at a large company
- Three treatment conditions (30 per condition)
- Acceptance and Commitment Therapy
- Behavioral Innovation Promotion
- Wait list control
29Stress
General Health and Stress
14
Behavioral Innovation
12
Control
ACT
10
Pre
Mid
Post
F-Up
30ACT for EpilepsyLundgren, Dahl, and Melin, soon
to be under review
- Randomized trial with 28 poor South African
epileptics, not fully regulated by medication - ACT vs. Attention Placebo
- 9 hours of therapy across 5 weeks two three hour
groups two 1.5 hour individual sessions
31Outcome Seizure Time
600
400
Seconds
200
Pre
Post
6 mo
1 yr
32Outcome Seizure Time
600
400
Seconds
200
Pre
Post
6 mo
1 yr
Cohens d at 1 yr 1.25
33Outcome
34In Conclusion
- Overall ACT seems to be producing consistently
positive gains, sometimes quickly, across an
unusually broad range of problems including
notably severe ones, and at times better than
existing empirically supported procedures - It seems to work through at least some of its
theoretically specified processes and components,
not just through general processes of change