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Acceptance and Commitment Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: Therapy: A Transdiagnostic Model of A Transdiagnostic Model of Behavior Change Behavior Change Jason B. Luoma, Ph.D., Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno Frank W. Bond, Ph.D., Goldsmiths College, University of London Akihiko Masuda, M.A., University of Nevada, Reno

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: A Transdiagnostic Model of Behavior Change Jason B. Luoma, Ph.D., Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno

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Page 1: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: A Transdiagnostic Model of Behavior Change Jason B. Luoma, Ph.D., Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: A Transdiagnostic Model of Behavior A Transdiagnostic Model of Behavior

ChangeChange

Jason B. Luoma, Ph.D.,Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D.

University of Nevada, Reno

Frank W. Bond, Ph.D., Goldsmiths College, University of London

Akihiko Masuda, M.A., University of Nevada, Reno

Page 2: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: A Transdiagnostic Model of Behavior Change Jason B. Luoma, Ph.D., Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno

Why pay attention to transdiagnostic Why pay attention to transdiagnostic processes of change?processes of change?

• Without transdiagnostic processes of change, behavioral Without transdiagnostic processes of change, behavioral technologies are likely to gather into an ever expanding pile with technologies are likely to gather into an ever expanding pile with no means for simplification or possibly advancement (there are no means for simplification or possibly advancement (there are currently how many hundred DSM diagnoses…)currently how many hundred DSM diagnoses…)

• It is unlikely that scientists and practitioners will be able to It is unlikely that scientists and practitioners will be able to maximize the efficacy of our interventions if the most proximal maximize the efficacy of our interventions if the most proximal psychological processes are not understood.psychological processes are not understood.

• If processes that cut across diagnostic categories can be found, clinician training might be made more efficient and effective

Page 3: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: A Transdiagnostic Model of Behavior Change Jason B. Luoma, Ph.D., Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno

DSM is based on topography Topographically-defined clusters of behavior/symptoms may not tell us much about etiology or maintenance of these patterns

Behaviors that appear different in form may have similar functions

Examples:

• Eating to avoid feeling lonely (BED/Bulimia?)

• Not getting out of bed to avoid feeling lonely (Depression?)

Common function? avoidance

Implication - Behaviors that look different may actually be the same when viewed functionally.

Page 4: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: A Transdiagnostic Model of Behavior Change Jason B. Luoma, Ph.D., Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno

DSM is based on: DSM is based on: The Assumption of Healthy NormalityThe Assumption of Healthy Normality

•By their nature humans are psychologically healthy•Abnormality is a disease or syndrome driven by unusual pathological processes•We need to understand these processes and change them

Page 5: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: A Transdiagnostic Model of Behavior Change Jason B. Luoma, Ph.D., Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno

ACT: Human Suffering is ACT: Human Suffering is Ubiquitous and NormalUbiquitous and Normal

Lots of data - high rates of serious suicidal ideation, high lifetime prevalence of “disorders”, prejudice, divorce, abuse, etc.

Hypothesis: Normal human psychological processes, particularly side effects of language, result in much suffering (Hayes, Barnes-Holmes, Roche, 2001)

“Disorder-specific” processes can be exacerbated by normal language processes

Page 6: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: A Transdiagnostic Model of Behavior Change Jason B. Luoma, Ph.D., Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno

Example: ACT and Psychotic SymptomsExample: ACT and Psychotic Symptoms Can ACT help with what a “disorder specific”

pathological process?

Bach & Hayes (2002): 80 S’s hospitalized with hallucinations and/or delusions randomized to either ACT or TAU

4 hours of ACT; all but one session inpatient

Recently replicated by Gaudiano and Herbert (2004) with similar results

Page 7: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: A Transdiagnostic Model of Behavior Change Jason B. Luoma, Ph.D., Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno

Impact on RehospitalizationImpact on Rehospitalization

ACTACT

.6

.7

.8

.9

1.0

40 80 120

Days After Initial Release

Treatment as UsualTreatment as Usual

Pro

port

ion

Not

H

ospi

tali

zed

Page 8: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: A Transdiagnostic Model of Behavior Change Jason B. Luoma, Ph.D., Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno

Processes of Change: Processes of Change: SymptomsSymptoms

Pre Post

100

75

25

ControlControl

ACTACT

50

Per

cent

age

Rep

orti

ng

Sym

ptom

s

Phase

Page 9: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: A Transdiagnostic Model of Behavior Change Jason B. Luoma, Ph.D., Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno

Processes of Change:Processes of Change:BelievabilityBelievability

Lit

eral

Bel

ieva

bili

ty o

f P

sych

otic

Sym

ptom

s (0

-100

)

Pre Post

80

60ControlControl

ACTACT40

Phase

Page 10: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: A Transdiagnostic Model of Behavior Change Jason B. Luoma, Ph.D., Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno

Relational Frame TheoryRelational Frame TheoryStimulus Equivalence: An Example of Stimulus Equivalence: An Example of the Core Verbal Processthe Core Verbal Process

Lemon

Function (e.g., taste)

Derived Function (e.g., taste)

Very early on (<14 months old or so), a human will begin to derive...

Page 11: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: A Transdiagnostic Model of Behavior Change Jason B. Luoma, Ph.D., Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno

These Three Relations Are the Basis for Suffering

When frames of coordination (previous slide), time or contingency, and comparative frames become part of a person’s repertoire, problem solving is made possible, but also:

• Comparison to an ideal• Worry about imagined futures• Social comparison / prejudice / stigma• Self-loathing• Social inhibition (e.g., fear of negative evaluation)

Page 12: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: A Transdiagnostic Model of Behavior Change Jason B. Luoma, Ph.D., Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno

Because of Relational FramesBecause of Relational FramesSelf-knowledge of painful events is painful

Abuse

Emotional

pain

Description

Description

Emotional

pain

The actual abuse causes emotional pain

Later, just describing or thinking about the event causes emotional pain, so thinking about it is avoided

Page 13: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: A Transdiagnostic Model of Behavior Change Jason B. Luoma, Ph.D., Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno

Implications of Relational FramesImplications of Relational FramesAt least two destructive processes result naturally from language:

Experiential AvoidanceExperiential Avoidance•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 •Based originally on natural processes of language but is amplified by the culture

Cognitive Fusion/LiteralityCognitive Fusion/LiteralityThe domination of derived functions (i.e., those based on language) over other response functions even when this process creates psychological and behavioral harm

Page 14: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: A Transdiagnostic Model of Behavior Change Jason B. Luoma, Ph.D., Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno

AcceptanceAcceptance involves

•Encouraging the direct moment-to-moment contact with previously avoided private events (that functionally need not be avoided) as they are directly experienced to be, not as they “say they are”

•E.g., interoceptive exposure; Gestalt exercises; challenging a control agenda

Cognitive defusionCognitive defusion involves •a change in the normal use of language and cognition such that the ongoing process of thinking is more evident and the normal functions of the products of thinking are broadened.

•Similar to mindfulness techniques (as seen in MBCT, DBT) clients are taught to observe thoughts without becoming entangled in them; a thought is understood, but it is also heard as a sound, seen as a habit, or dispassionately observed as an automatic verbal relation

Two Processes Aimed at the Root CauseTwo Processes Aimed at the Root Cause

Page 15: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: A Transdiagnostic Model of Behavior Change Jason B. Luoma, Ph.D., Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno

ACT Outcomes to DateACT Outcomes to Date At least 31 completed studies (25 published), including 11

randomized controlled trials

Problems: pain, anxiety, psychosis, depression, eating disorders, conduct disorder, prejudice, substance abuse, smoking, stress, burnout, school performance, stigma, OCD, diabetes

Variable in lengths and emphases

Always better than control; often has performed better than active treatment comparators

Page 16: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: A Transdiagnostic Model of Behavior Change Jason B. Luoma, Ph.D., Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno

ACT Mediational ResultsACT Mediational Results• DiabetesDiabetes - ACT compared to diabetes education - diabetes-related

acceptance shown to be a mediator of self-management behaviors (Gregg, 2004)

• Smoking CessationSmoking Cessation - ACT compared to nicotine patch - smoking-related acceptance shown to be mediator of smoking cessation outcomes (Gifford, Kohlenberg, Hayes et al., 2004)

• Workplace stressWorkplace stress - ACT compared to Innovation Promotion and waitlist - general acceptance (AAQ) mediated general mental health outcomes (Bond & Bunce, 2000)

• Counselor Stigma and BurnoutCounselor Stigma and Burnout - ACT compared to multicultural training and education - believability of stigmatizing thoughts mediated outcomes on burnout and frequency of stigma (Hayes et al., 2004).

Page 17: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: A Transdiagnostic Model of Behavior Change Jason B. Luoma, Ph.D., Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno

Process of Change OutcomesProcess of Change OutcomesBelievability of problem-relevant thoughts is reduced by ACTBelievability of problem-relevant thoughts is reduced by ACT• depression (Zettle & Hayes, 1986)

• psychosis (Bach & Hayes, 2003; Gaudiano, 2004)

• polysubstance abuse (relative to control; Bissett, 2001)

• counselor stigma and burnout (Hayes et al., 2004)

Acceptance is increased by ACTAcceptance is increased by ACT• chronic pain (McCracken, Vowles, & Eccleston, in press)

• diabetes self-management (Gregg, 2004)

• mathematics anxiety (Zettle, 2003)

• parents of autistic children (Blackledge, 2004)

• self-stigma in substance abuse (Kohlenberg, Luoma, et al., 2004)

• smoking cessation (relative to control; Gifford et al., 2004)

• workplace stress (Bond & Bunce, 2000)

Page 18: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: A Transdiagnostic Model of Behavior Change Jason B. Luoma, Ph.D., Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno

Experimental Psychopathology Experimental Psychopathology StudiesStudies

• Positive results comparing defusion vs. control instructions on reducing discomfort and believability of negative self-relevant thoughts (Masuda et al., 2004)

• in 2 cold pressor/1 analogue pain task experiments, individuals given an acceptance-based rationale were able to tolerate higher levels of pain than those given a control rationale (Gutierrez, Luciano, & Fink, 2004; Hayes et al., 1999; Takahashi et al., 2002)

• in 2 experiments studying tolerance of CO2 enriched air, participants (normals/panic disordered) given an acceptance based rationale reported less distress and were more willing to try the task again (Eifert & Heffner, 2003; Levitt, Brown, Orsillo, & Barlow, 2004)

Page 19: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: A Transdiagnostic Model of Behavior Change Jason B. Luoma, Ph.D., Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno

Meta analysis of Correlational StudiesMeta analysis of Correlational Studies

• 21 studies with 51 correlations investigated the relationship between the AAQ and quality of life (QOL) outcomes (e.g., depression, anxiety, PTSD, trichotillomania, stress, pain, job performance, and negative affectivity).

• The Q statistic indicated that the magnitude of these 51 associations varied significantly. Subsequent analyses indicated that these correlations could be separated into two groups, in each of which the magnitude of the correlations was significantly similar or homogenous.

• Group 1: 26 correlations, with a total sample size of 6,024:

Medium size effect: aggregated correlation 0.28 (95% confidence interval: 0.26 – 0.31).• Group 2: 25 correlations, with a total sample size of 4,817:

Large size effect: aggregated correlation of 0.54 (95% confidence interval: 0.52 – 0.56)