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Internet-delivered acceptance and values-based exposure treatment for fibromyalgia: a pilot study

APA Citation

Ljótsson, B., Atterlöf, E., Lagerlöf, M., Andersson, E., Jernelöv, S., Hedman, E., Kemani, M., & Wicksell, R. K. (2014). Internet-delivered acceptance and values-based exposure treatment for fibromyalgia: A pilot study. Cognitive Behavior Therapy, 43, 93-104.

Publication Topic
ACT: Empirical
Publication Type
Article
Language
English
Abstract

Background

Acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) is a promising treatment option for fibromyalgia (FM). Studies have shown that many cognitive behavioral protocols can be transferred to the internet with sustained efficacy. However, no study has investigated the effect on an internet(delivered ACT(based protocol for FM. The present study evaluated the efficacy, acceptability, and the health economic effects of an internet-delivered acceptance and values-based exposure treatment for fibromyalgia.



Methods

This open pilot trial included 41 self(referred women with a FM diagnosis. The 10-week internet-delivered treatment included acceptance, mindfulness, work with life-values, and systematic exposure to FM symptoms and FM(related situations. Participants also had regular contact with an assigned online therapist. Assessments were made at pre-treatment, post-treatment, and 6-month follow-up.



Results

The treatment was completed by 70% of the participants. Attrition rates were low, with 98% completing the post-treatment assessment and 90% completing the 6-month follow-up assessment. Multiple imputation was used to replace missing values. Pre- to post-treatment within-group effect sizes were in the moderate to large range (Cohen’s d = 0.62- 1.56) on measures of FM symptoms and impact, disability, quality of life, depression, anxiety, fatigue, and psychological flexibility. All improvements were maintained at follow-up. Economical analyses revealed significant societal cost reductions that offset the treatment costs within two months of treatment completion.



Conclusions

An internet-delivered psychological treatment based on acceptance and exposure principles seems to be an efficacious, acceptable, and cost-effective treatment for FM. Randomized controlled trials are needed to confirm these results.