Research Resources Archives

Research Resources Archives

Community

Research Summaries (2011 - 2017)

Research Summaries (2011 - 2017)

The date that each webpage was last updated is in paratheses.

  • ACT Handouts. The ACT Handout was created annually from 2006 - 2014.
  • ACT/RFT Reader Update. This page includes a list of recent ACT/RFT publications with brief summaries for each article (2008 - 2011).
Community

Research Summaries (2006 - 2010)

Research Summaries (2006 - 2010)

The date that each webpage was last updated is in paratheses.

  • ACT Handouts. The ACT Handout was created annually from 2006 - 2014.
  • ACT/RFT Reader Update. This page includes a list of recent ACT/RFT publications with brief summaries for each article (2008 - 2011).
  • RFT Studies. Includes a reference list of published RFT studies (2010).
  • Correlational studies. Includes a reference list of published correlational studies with ACT-relevant measures (2009).
  • Case Studies. Includes a reference list of published ACT case studies (2008).


Community

ACT for addictions: Studies and publications

ACT for addictions: Studies and publications

There is an Applying ACT to Addictions Special Interest Group (SIG) that ACBS members can join.

For an up-to-date list of ACT RCTs for addiction, ACBS members can go to the Applying ACT to Addictions SIG Resources.


Below is summarized existing ACT empirical articles and references related to substance abuse, gambling, and recovery. Please contribute by adding to it if you see that references are missing.

Gambling related references:

Dymond, S. & Whelan, R. (2007). Verbal relations and the behavior analysis of gambling. Analysis of Gambling Behavior, 1, 19-20

Nastally, B. L. & Dixon, M. R. (2012). The Effect of a Brief Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Intervention on the Near-Miss Effect in Problem Gamblers. Psychological Record, 62 (4), 677-690.

Non empirical publications on substance abuse

Batten, S. V., DeViva, J. C., Santanello, A. P., Morris, L. J., Benson, P. R., & Mann, M. A. (2009). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for comorbid PTSD and substance use disorders. In J. Blackledge, J. Ciarrochi, & F. Dean (Eds.), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: Current Directions (pp. 311-328). Queensland, Australia: Australian Academic Press.

Buckner, J. D., Zvolensky, M. J.,  Farris, S. G., & Hogan, J. (in press). Social Anxiety and Coping Motives for Cannabis Use: The Impact of Experiential Avoidance.
Psychology of Addictive Behaviors.

Heffner, M. & Eifert, G. (2003). Valued directions: Acceptance & Commitment Therapy in the treatment of alcohol dependence. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 10, 378-383.

Luoma, J.B. & Kohlenberg, B. S. (2012). Self-Stigma and Shame in Addictions. In S. C. Hayes & M. Levin (Eds). Acceptance, Mindfulness, Values, and Addictive Behaviors: Counseling with Contemporary Cognitive Behavioral Therapies. Oakland: New Harbinger.

Smout, M. (2008). Psychotherapy for Methamphetamine Dependence. Drug and Alcohol Services South Australia 2008: 429. https://www.sahealth.sa.gov.au

Turner, N., Welches, P., & Conti, S. (2013). Mindfulness-Based Sobriety. New Habringer, Oakland, CA. (book that integrates ACT with some other related approaches)

Wilson, K. G. & Byrd, M. R. (2004). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Substance Abuse and Dependence. In S. C. Hayes & K. Strosahl, (Eds.)A Practical Guide to Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (pp. 153-184). New York: Springer Press. (preprint available from 1st author -- click on his name above.)

Wilson, K. G. & Hayes, S. C. (2000). Why it is crucial to understand thinking and feeling: an analysis and application to drug abuse. The Behavior Analyst, 23, 25-43.

Wilson, K. G., Hayes, S. C., & Byrd, M. (2000). Exploring compatibilities between Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and 12-Step treatment for substance abuse. Journal of Rational-Emotive and Cognitive-Behavior Therapy, 18, 209-234.

Substance abuse research

Batten, S. V., & Hayes, S. C. (2005). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy in the Treatment of Comorbid Substance Abuse and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder: A Case Study. Clinical Case Studies, 4(3), 246-262.

Bricker, J. B., Mann, S. L., Marek, P. M., Liu, J. M., Peterson, A. V. (2010). Telephone-delivered acceptance and commitment therapy for adult smoking cessation: A feasibility study. Nicotine & Tobacco Research, 12,454-458.

Bricker, J., Wyszynski, C., Comstock, B., & Heffner, J. L. (2013). Pilot randomized controlled trial of web-based acceptance and commitment therapy for smoking cessation. Nicotine & Tobacco Research, 15(10), 1756-1764.  

Brown, R. A., Palm, K. M., Strong, D. R., Lejuez, C. W., Kahler, C. W. Zvolensky, M. J., Hayes, S. C., Wilson, K. G., Gifford, E. V. (2008). Development of an exposure- and ACT-based distress tolerance treatment for early lapse smokers: Rationale, program description, and preliminary findings. Behavior Modification, 32, 302-332.

Gifford, E. V., Kohlenberg, B. S., Hayes, S. C., Antonuccio, D. O., Piasecki, M. M.., Rasmussen-Hall, M. L., & Palm, K. M. (2004). Acceptance theory-based treatment for smoking cessation: An initial trial of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy. Behavior Therapy, 35, 689-705.

Gifford, E. V., Kohlenberg, B., Hayes, S. C., Pierson, H., Piasecki, M., Antonuccio, D., & Palm, K. (2011). Does acceptance and relationship focused behavior therapy contribute to bupropion outcomes? A randomized controlled trial of FAP and ACT for smoking cessation. Behavior Therapy, 42, 700-715. L

Hayes, S. C., & Levin, M. (Eds.). (2012). Mindfulness and Acceptance for Addictive Behaviors: Applying Contextual CBT to Substance Abuse and Behavioral Addictions. New Harbinger Publications.

Hayes, S. C., Wilson, K.G., Gifford, E.V., Bissett, R., Piasecki, M., Batten, S.V., Byrd, M., & Gregg, J. (2004). A preliminary trial of twelve-step facilitation and acceptance and commitment therapy with polysubstance-abusing methadone-maintained opiate addicts. Behavior Therapy, 35, 667-688.

Luoma, J. B., Drake, C., Hayes, S. C., Kohlenberg, B. (2011). Substance Abuse and Psychological Flexibility: The Development of a New Measure. Addiction Research and Theory, 19(1), 3-13.

Luoma, J.B., Nobles, R. H., Drake, C., E., Hayes, S. C., O-Hair, A., Fletcher, L., & Kohlenberg, B. S. (2013). A New Measure of Self-Stigma in Addiction: Measure Development and Psychometrics. Journal of Psychopathology and Behavioral Assessment, 34, 1-12.

Luoma, J. B., Kohlenberg, B. S., Hayes, S. C., Bunting, K. & Rye, A. K. (2008). Reducing the self stigma of substance abuse through acceptance and commitment therapy: Model, manual development, and pilot outcomes. Addiction Research & Therapy, 16, 149-165.

Luoma, J. B., & Kohlenberg, B.S., Hayes, S. C., & Fletcher, L. (2012). Slow and Steady Wins the Race: A Randomized Clinical Trial of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Targeting Shame in Substance Use Disorders. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 80, 43-51.

Smout, M. F., Longo, M., Harrison, S., Minniti, R., Wickes, W., & White, J. M. (2010). Psychosocial treatment for methamphetamine use disorders: A preliminary randomized controlled trial of cognitive behavior therapy and acceptance and commitment therapy. Substance Abuse, 31, 98–107.

Stotts, A., Masuda, A., & Wilson, K. (2009) Using Acceptance and Commitment Therapy During Methadone Dose Reduction: Rationale, Treatment Description, and a Case Report. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 16, 205-213.

Stotts, A. L., Green, C., Masuda, A., Grabowski, J., Wilson, K., Northrup, T. F., ... & Schmitz, J. M. (2012). A stage I pilot study of acceptance and commitment therapy for methadone detoxification. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 125(3), 215-222.

Villagrá Lanza, P., & González Menéndez, A. (2013). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for drug abuse in incarcerated women. Psicothema, 25(3).  This is part of a larger study so if it better to refewr to the full data set: Villagrá P, Fernández P, Rodríguez F, González A. (in press). Acceptance and commitment therapy vs. cognitive behavioural therapy in the treatment of substance use disorder with incarcerated women. Journal of Clinical Psychology. The long term (18 month) follow up data are reported in González-Menéndez, A., Fernández, P., Rodríguez, F., & Villagrá, P. (2014) Long-term outcomes of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy in drug-dependent female inmates: A randomized controlled trial. International Journal of Clinical Health Psychology, 14, 18-27.

Twohig, M. P., Shoenberger, D., & Hayes, S. C. (2007). A preliminary investigation of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy as a treatment for marijuana dependence in adults. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 40,619-632.

Tull, M., Schulzinger, D., Schmidt, N.B., Zvolensky, M.J., Lejuez, C. W. (2007). Development and initial examination of a brief intervention for heightened anxiety sensitivity among heroin users. Behavior Modification, 31, 220-242.

Vilardaga, R., Luoma, J.B., Hayes, S.C., Pistorello, J., Levin, M., Hildebrandt, M.J., Kohlenberg, B., Roget, N. & Bond, F.W. (in press). Burnout among the addiction counseling workforce: The differential roles of mindfulness and values-based processes and worksite factors. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment.

Jason Luoma

ACT Group Intervention Research

ACT Group Intervention Research

Here are just a few of the studies on ACT done in groups (some of these also have individual sessions, but all have groups as a substantial part of the intervention):

Bond, F. W. & Bunce, D. (2000). Mediators of change in emotion-focused and problem-focused worksite stress management interventions. Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, 5, 156-163.

Zettle, R. D., & Raines, J. C. (1989). Group cognitive and contextual therapies in treatment of depression. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 45,438-445.

Hayes, S. C., Bissett, R., Roget, N., Padilla, M., Kohlenberg, B. S., Fisher, G., Masuda, A., Pistorello, J., Rye, A. K., Berry, K. & Niccolls, R. (2004). The impact of acceptance and commitment training and multicultural training on the stigmatizing attitudes and professional burnout of substance abuse counselors. Behavior Therapy, 35, 821-835.

Hayes, S. C., Wilson, K. G., Gifford, E. V., Bissett, R., Piasecki, M., Batten, S. V., Byrd, M., & Gregg, J. (2004). A randomized controlled trial of twelve-step facilitation and acceptance and commitment therapy with polysubstance abusing methadone maintained opiate addicts. Behavior Therapy, 35, 667-688.

Gifford, E. V., Kohlenberg, B. S., Hayes, S. C., Antonuccio, D. O., Piasecki, M. M.., Rasmussen-Hall, M. L., & Palm, K. M. (2004). Acceptance theory-based treatment for smoking cessation: An initial trial of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy. Behavior Therapy, 35, 689-705.

McCracken, L. M, Vowles, K. E., & Eccleston, C. (2005). Acceptance-based treatment for persons with complex, long-standing chronic pain: A preliminary analysis of treatment outcome in comparison to a waiting phase. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 43, 1335-1346.

Gratz, K. L. & Gunderson, J. G. (2006). Preliminary data on an acceptance-based emotion regulation group intervention for deliberate self-harm among women with Borderline Personality Disorder. Behavior Therapy, 37, 25-35.

Blackledge, J. T. & Hayes, S. C. (2006). Using Acceptance and Commitment Training in the support of parents of children diagnosed with autism. Child & Family Behavior Therapy, 28 (1), 1-18.

Lundgren, A. T., Dahl, J., Melin, L. & Kees, B. (2006). Evaluation of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for drug refractory epilepsy: A randomized controlled trial in South Africa. Epilepsia, 47, 2173-2179.

Gregg, J. A., Callaghan, G. M., Hayes, S. C., & Glenn-Lawson, J. L. (2007). Improving diabetes self-management through acceptance, mindfulness, and values: A randomized controlled trial. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 75(2), 336-343.

Luoma, J. B., Hayes, S. C., Roget, N., Fisher, G., Padilla, M., Bissett, R., Kohlenberg, B. K. , Holt, C., & & Twohig, M. P. (2008). Augmenting continuing education with psychologically-focused group consultation: Effects on adoption of Group Drug Counseling. Psychotherapy Theory, Research, Practice, Training, 44, 463-469.

Varra, A. A., Hayes, S. C., Roget, N., & Fisher, G. (2008). A randomized control trial examining the effect of Acceptance and Commitment Training on clinician willingness to use evidence-based pharmacotherapy. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 76, 449-458.

Lillis, J., Hayes, S. C., Bunting, K., Masuda, A. (2009). Teaching acceptance and mindfulness to improve the lives of the obese: A preliminary test of a theoretical model. Annals of Behavioral Medicine, 37, 58-69.

Tapper, K., Shaw, C., Ilsley, J., Hill, A. J., Bond, F. W., & Moore, L. (2009). Exploratory randomised controlled trial of a mindfulness-based weight loss intervention for women. Appetite, 52, 396–404.

Flaxman, P. E. & Bond, F. W. (2010). A randomised worksite comparison of acceptance and commitment therapy and stress inoculation training. Behaviour Research and Therapy 43, 816-820.

Flaxman, P. E., & Bond, F. W. (2010). Worksite stress management training: Moderated effects and clinical significance. Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, 15, 347-358.

Fledderus, M., Bohlmeijer, E. T., Smit, F., & Westerhof, G. J. (2010). Mental health promotion as a new goal in public mental health care: A randomized controlled trial of an intervention enhancing psychological flexibility. American Journal of Public Health, 10, 2372-2378.

Bohlmeijer, E. T., Fledderus, M., Rokx, T. A., & Pieterse, M. E. (2011). Efficacy of an early intervention based on acceptance and commitment therapy for adults with depressive symptomatology: Evaluation in a randomized controlled trial. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 49, 62-67.

Brinkborg, H., Michanek, J., Hesser, H., & Berglund, G. (2011). Acceptance and commitment therapy for the treatment of stress among social workers: A randomized controlled trial. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 49, 389-398.

Pearson, A. N., Follette, V. M. & Hayes, S. C. (in press). A pilot study of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) as a workshop intervention for body dissatisfaction and disordered eating attitudes. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice.

Luoma, J. B., Kohlenberg, B. S., Hayes, S. C. & Fletcher, L. (in press). Slow and steady wins the race: A randomized clinical trial of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy targeting shame in substance use disorders. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology.

Morton, J., Snowdon, S., Gopold, M. & Guymer, E. (in press). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy group treatment for symptoms of Borderline Personality Disorder: A public sector pilot study. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice.

Folke, F., Parling, T., & Melin, L. (in press). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for depression: A preliminary randomized clinical trial for unemployed on long-term sick leave. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice.

Biglan, A., Layton, G. L., Backen Jones, L., Hankins, M. & Rusby, J. C. (in press). The value of workshops on psychological flexibility for early childhood special education staff. Topics in Early Childhood Special Education.  

Most of these studies are in the publications area of the site (and if one is missing prompt the author to get it up there).

Steven Hayes

ACT for Health Problems

ACT for Health Problems

As healthcare delivery continues to move towards and integrated care model, the connections between biological, psychological, and social processes affecting health remain minimally understood. Researchers have been exploring the role of acceptance, mindfulness, and values in producing positive health outcomes, while examining the negative role of experiential avoidance in the development and maintenance of health problems. ACT studies have been conducted in the areas of chronic pain, smoking, stress, burnout, diabetes management, and epilepsy with more studies in progress. In this section you will find links to researchers, studies, and applications of ACT in the areas of Wellness, Behavioral Health, Health Psychology, and Behavioral Medicine.

Jason Lillis

ACT for Weight Control

ACT for Weight Control
A number of researchers are working on weight control issues from an ACT/ RFT perspective. Here is where you will find the relevant research and conceptual issues.
Jason Lillis

ACT Theory and Weight Control

ACT Theory and Weight Control

From an ACT perspective, many of the psychological factors related to weight control that were discussed previously can be grouped into three categories:

  • Persistence in the face of difficult emotions and thoughts or distress tolerance
  • Cognitive rigidity
  • Motivational factors

Persistence: Individuals who have difficulty maintaining weight loss typically report or have been found to eat in response to stress and other negative affective states, such as hopelessness, helplessness, anger, anxiety, or boredom. From an ACT perspective, this can be seen as a problem with persistence or distress tolerance. The ACT theory of psychopathology suggests that attempts to change or eliminate unwanted private experiences (experiential avoidance) result in a narrow set of behavioral responses. In this case, the presence of uncomfortable or undesirable emotions consistently occasions eating for comfort. The problem is that the short-term effects of reducing negative affect have little or no impact on an individual’s long-term ability to face discomfort and lead a healthy, vital life. Each instance strengthens the relationship between uncomfortable emotion and avoidance. In a sense, the individual becomes less able to deal with uncomfortable emotions over time and eating is required more and more as a coping response.

Rigidity: Individuals who have difficulty maintaining weight loss typically report or have been found to adhere to rigid thinking patterns and rigid control of eating behaviors. Unsuccessful maintainers frequently adhere to dichotomous “all or nothing” thinking, viewing a minor misstep as a total failure or discounting any gains that fall short of some imagined ideal as meaningless. These individuals are prone to alternating between total restriction of desirable foods and a complete lack of weight controls all together. From and ACT perspective, this can be viewed as cognitive fusion. Cognitive fusion refers to situations in which behavior is excessively regulated by verbal rules and is insensitive to direct experiences. Individuals may be responding to verbal formulations, such as, “I had cake therefore I blew it, so what’s the point” or, “I only lost 15 pounds. I’ll never get to where I want to be.” These private events are experienced as literal truth, not as experiences that can be noticed while not being believed nor disbelieved. Individuals respond as though this is a true state of affairs and engage in behaviors that are inconsistent with a healthy, vital life.

Motivational factors: Individuals who have difficulty maintaining weight loss typically report attempting to lose weight in response to pressure from friends, family members, or health professionals as opposed to personal reasons, such as caring for oneself, wanting to be more healthy, or less activity restriction. From an ACT perspective, this can be seen as a form of rule-governance called pliance. Pliance occurs when individuals engage in behaviors in an attempt to please others or “be good” (Hayes, Strosahl et al., 1999). When this function dominates over direct, personal experiences of what works, problems can occur. These externally based contingencies are often not enough to maintain behavior outside the presence of the contextual variables (e.g. family member telling them they are doing a good job). Given the lifelong nature of maintaining weight, it is unlikely that excessive pliance could be a successful long-term behavioral approach. From an ACT perspective, individuals do not need to engage in behaviors consistent with weight maintenance in order to be praised by others; they can do them as an expression of chosen personal values (also called augmenting) and doing what works in regard to those values (also called tracking). In this respect, weight maintenance behaviors are less rigid and are more likely to be tied to the direct contingencies necessary for success.

Motivation, then, can be viewed primarily as a values issue. People are often not connected to their values. It is possible that there is frequently a disparity between what people want in their lives and what they are actually doing. This disparity can be painful to contact, thus relegating the issue of values to the background. Acceptance and defusion can help create a context where this disparity can be noticed without attachment to the painful private events that can accompany this connection. From an ACT perspective, then, values work involves goal setting/ attainment and the willingness to say/ know what is truly wanted. This involves the ability to recognize and be in contact with the disparity between what is desired and what is currently being done.

Jason Lillis

Relevant Psychological Variables

Relevant Psychological Variables
The ability to cope with stress has been associated with weight maintenance. Individuals who were described as having poor coping skills, or a poor ability to manage internal or external demands that are appraised as stressful, have been show to regain weight when confronted with stressful life events (S. Byrne, Cooper, & Fairburn, 2003; Gormally & Rardin, 1981; Gormally, Rardin, & Black, 1980; Grilo, Shiffman, & Wing, 1989). People who regain lost weight tend to eat in response to the presence of negative emotional states or use food to regulate their mood; a phenomenon often referred to as emotional eating (S. Byrne et al., 2003; Ganley, 1989). Obese people who have difficulty losing or keeping off weight have been shown to use food as a source of comfort and satisfaction (Castelnuovo-Tedesco & Schiebel, 1975), eat after difficult interpersonal situations (Hockley, 1979), and eat in response to hopelessness, helplessness, anger, anxiety, or boredom (Hudson & Williams, 1981; Rotmann & Becker, 1970). Motivational factors have also been associated with weight maintenance. Successful weight maintainers have been found to be motivated to lose weight for more personal reasons as opposed to pressures from family, friends, or medical professionals (Ogden, 2000). It appears that when a person is intrinsically motivated, and weight loss is tied to meaningful outcomes other than just losing weight, patients tend to be more successful in keeping weight off. Self-efficacy has been also been associated with weight maintenance. Self-efficacy can be described as a belief in one’s capability to produce desired outcomes in one’s life. Related, individuals who respond to overeating episodes passively tend to regain weight more than those who respond actively (Jeffery et al., 1984). The key difference seems to be that active responders somehow do not get stuck when confronted with adversity. Rigid versus flexible control of eating behavior has been associated with weight regain. Rigid control is characterized by dichotomous ‘all or nothing’ thinking and alternating periods of severe restriction and no weight control efforts. Flexible control is characterized by a ‘more or less’ approach, a long-term outlook, and the inclusion of desired foods at moderate amounts (Westenhoefer, 2001). Despite the literature findings, potentially important psychological variables are rarely targeted in clinical trials of comprehensive weight loss programs or program components. Many interventions lack a psychological component altogether (for a review, see Avenell et al., 2004).
Jason Lillis

Studies on or Related to Weight Maintenance

Studies on or Related to Weight Maintenance

Outcome Studies: Weight Maintenance

Micro/Component Studies: Weight Maintenance

  • Lillis, J. (2008). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for the treatment of obesity-related stigma and sustained weight loss. Unpublished doctoral dissertation. University of Nevada, Reno.

  • Lillis, J., Thomas, J., Niemeier, H., & Wing, R. (2017). Exploring process variables through which acceptance-based behavioral interventions may improve weight loss maintenance. Journal of Contextual Behavioral Science, 6(4), 398-403.

98 participants with chocolate cravings were exposed to a CBT-based protocol and an ACT-based protocol or no instructions and required to carry chocolate with them of for two days. Those more impacted by food related cues ate less and had fewer cravings in the ACT condition.

Measurement Development: Weight Maintenance

Psychological Flexibility and Weight Maintenance

Physical Activity and Weight Maintenance

Body Image and Weight Maintenance

Jason Lillis

The Problem of Obesity

The Problem of Obesity

Obesity has been referred to as a dangerous epidemic and one of the most important public health challenges of the 21st century. The sharp increase in obesity has contributed to increases in related conditions, causing a sizeable economic cost burden for health providers and funding agencies. The 2002 estimated U.S. cost burden for obesity was $92.6 billion (Finkelstein, Fiebelkorn, & Wang, 2003).

It has been shown that marketplace food portions have increased in size since the 1970’s(Young & Nestle, 2002). People have been eating out more (K. Ball, Brown, & Crawford, 2002), food industry marketing has increased, and larger numbers of new products are being introduced (Gallo, 1990). Most Americans are sedentary. Technological advances have led to an increase in use of computers, cars, elevators, and televisions, with subsequent decreases in athletic activities including walking and bicycling.

Obese people also face discrimination resulting in external consequences. A recent review of the literature found evidence of obesity discrimination at every stage of the employment cycle (Roehling, 1999). Negative attitudes regarding obesity are widespread, socially acceptable, and develop as early as three years of age (Falkner et al., 1999; Puhl & Brownell, 2003a).

Well controlled, comprehensive weight loss programs often achieve substantial weight loss results with low rates of attrition. However weight maintenance has been a significant problem in the literature. Typically, half the weight lost is regained in the first year following treatment, and by 3-5 years posttreatment, 80% of patients have returned to or exceeded their pretreatment weight (Perri, 1998; Wadden et al., 1989; Wing, 1998).

Jason Lillis

ACT-Related Research on Health Problems

ACT-Related Research on Health Problems

The pages below list published ACT-related research studies for specific health problems that are available on the website as of July 2008. Empirical studies listed include ACT outcome studies, case studies, correlational research and micro/component studies. The literature is moving quickly and it takes a while to update pages like this. For a more detailed list of outcome studies and other empirical research you can download the "ACT Handout" and/or check the research summaries posted on the website, which are updated more regularly.

Update in Aug 2016: a new meta-analysis is useful in many of these areas: Graham, C. D., Gouick, J., Krahé, C., & Gillanders, D. (2016). A systematic review of the use of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) in chronic disease and long-term conditions. Clinical Psychology Review, 46, 46–58. doi:10.1016/j.cpr.2016.04.009

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Cancer Research

Cancer Research
Outcome Studies: Coping with Cancer
  • Páez, M., Luciano, M. C., & Gutiérrez, O. (2007). Tratamiento psicológico para el afrontamiento del cáncer de mama. Estudio comparativo entre estrategias de aceptación y de control cognitivo. [Psychological treatment for breast cancer. Comparison between acceptance based and cognitive control based strategies] Psicooncología, 4, 75–95.
  • Branstetter, A. D., Wilson, K. G., Hildebrandt, M., & Mutch, D. (2004). Improving psychological adjustment among cancer patients: ACT and CBT. Paper presented at the Association for Advancement of Behavior Therapy, New Orleans.
    Large randomized trial showing that ACT is more helpful than traditional CBT in dealing with end stage cancer and works through a different process. Amazing data.
Case Studies: Coping with Cancer
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Chronic Pain Research

Chronic Pain Research

Outcome Studies: Chronic Pain

  • Vowles, K. E., & McCracken, L. M. (2008). Acceptance and values-based action in chronic pain: A study of treatment effectiveness and process. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 76, 397-407.
  • Wicksell, R.K., Ahlqvist, J., Bring, A., Melin, L. & Olsson, G.L. (2008). Can exposure and acceptance strategies improve functioning and life satisfaction in people with chronic pain and whiplash-associated disorders (WAD)? A randomized controlled trial. Cognitive Behaviour Therapy
    Included people (adults) with longstanding pain due to whiplash (WAD). A 10-session protocol was compared with a wait list control group, and found significant improvements following treatment in functioning and life satisfaction, as well as in psychological flexibility (as measured with PIPS).
  • Wicksell R.K, Melin, L. & Olsson, G.L. (2007). Exposure and acceptance in the rehabilitation of children and adolescents with chronic pain.European Journal of Pain, 11, 267-274.
    Open trial with 14 adolescents. Good outcomes that continue to improve through follow up.
  • McCracken, L. M., Vowles, K. E., & Eccleston, C. (2005). Acceptance-based treatment for persons with complex, long standing chronic pain: A preliminary analysis of treatment outcome in comparison to a waiting phase. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 43, 1335-1346.
    108 chronic pain patients with a long history of treatment are followed through an ACT-based 3-4 week residential treatment program. Measures improved from initial assessment to pre-treatment on average only 3% (average of 3.9 month wait), but improved on average 34% following treatment. 81% of these gains were retained through a 3 month follow up. Changes in acceptance predicted positive changes in depression, pain related anxiety, physical disability, psychosocial disability, and the ability to stand. Positive outcomes were also seen in a timed walk, decreased medical visits, daily rest due to pain, pain intensity, and decreased pain medication use.
  • Dahl, J., Wilson, K. G., & Nilsson, A. (2004). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and the treatment of persons at risk for long-term disability resulting from stress and pain symptoms: A preliminary randomized trial. Behavior Therapy, 35, 785-802.
    A small randomized controlled trial shows that a four hour ACT intervention reduced sick day usage by 91% over the next six months compared to treatment as usual in a group of chronic pain patients at risk for going on to permanent disability.

Mediation Analyses

Case Studies: Chronic Pain

  • Kleen, M., & Jaspers, J. P. C. (2007). Women should not be allowed to run. Acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) with a pain disorder. Translated from: Vrouwen horen niet hard te lopen. Acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) bij een pijnstoornis. Gedragstherapie, 40, 7-26.
  • Wicksell, R. K., Dahl, J., Magnusson, B., & Olsson, G. L. (2005). Using Acceptance and Commitment Therapy in the rehabilitation of an adolescent female with chronic pain: A case example. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 12, 415-423. Shows dramatic improvement with a 14 year old chronic pain patient using a values focused ACT protocol.

Micro/Component Studies: Chronic Pain

  • A number of other micro/component studies have examined the impact of brief ACT interventions on performance in pain inducing preparations and are listed here.

Correlational Studies: Chronic Pain

  • McCracken, L. M., & Vowles, K. E. (2007). Psychological flexibility and traditional pain management strategies in relation to patient functioning with chronic pain: An examination of a revised instrument.Journal of Pain, 8, 339-349.
  • McCracken, L. M. (2006). Toward a fully functional, flexible, and defused approach to pain in young people. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 13, 182-184.
  • McCracken, L. M., & Eccleston, C. (2006). A comparison of the relative utility of coping and acceptance-based measures in a sample of chronic pain sufferers. European Journal of Pain, 10(1), 23-29.
  • McCracken, L. M. (2005). Social context and acceptance of chronic pain: The role of solicitous and punishing responses. Pain, 113, 155-159.
  • McCracken, L. M. (1999). Behavioral constituents of chronic pain acceptance: Results from factor analysis of the Chronic Pain Acceptance Questionnaire. Journal of Back & Musculoskeletal Rehabilitation, 13, 93-100.
  • McCracken, L. M. (1998). Learning to live with the pain: acceptance of pain predicts adjustment in persons with chronic pain. Pain, 74, 21-27.
    This study is based on a pain related early version of the AAQ. Greater acceptance of pain was associated with reports of lower pain intensity, less pain-related anxiety and avoidance, less depression, less physical and psychosocial disability, more daily uptime, and better work status. A relatively low correlation between acceptance and pain intensity showed that acceptance is not simply a function of having a low level of pain. Regression analyses showed that acceptance of pain predicted better adjustment on all other measures of patient function, independent of perceived pain intensity. This work is replicated, refined and extended in McCracken, L. M. & Eccleston, C. (2003). Coping or acceptance: What to do about chronic pain. Pain, 105, 197-204. and McCracken, L. M. , Vowles, K. E., & Eccleston, C. (2004). Acceptance of chronic pain: Component analysis and a revised assessment method. Pain, 107, 159-166.
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Epilepsy Research

Epilepsy Research

Outcome Studies: Epilepsy

  • Lundgren, A. T., Dahl, J., Melin, L., & Kies, B. (2006). Evaluation of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for drug refractory epilepsy: A randomized controlled trial in South Africa. Epilepsia, 47, 2173-2179.
    RCT with 27 drug resistant epileptics comparing 9 hours of ACT – individual and group -- to supportive therapy. Reduction of seizures to near zero level; maintenance for a year. Quality of life improves continuously through the follow up. Mediational analyses fit the ACT model and are described in more detail in Lundgren, T., Dahl, J., & Hayes, S. C. (2008). Evaluation of mediators of change in the treatment of epilepsy with Acceptance and Commitment Therapy. Journal of Behavior Medicine, 31(3), 225-235.
  • Lundgren, A. T. (2004). Development and evaluation of an integrative health model in the treatment of epilepsy: Two randomized controlled trials investigating the effects of a short term ACT intervention, yoga, and attention control therapy in India and South Africa. Unpublished thesis, University of Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden.
    Two small RCTs (N = 18; and N = 28) comparing a three session ACT protocol (two individual; one group) to two other conditions. As compared to yoga, significantly reduced seizures in the ACT condition; as compared to attention control, significantly reduced seizures and experiential avoidance, and significantly increased quality of life in the ACT condition at a one year follow up.
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Other Health-Related Research

Other Health-Related Research

Outcome Studies: Diabetes Management

  • Gregg, J. A., Callaghan, G. M., Hayes, S. C., & Glenn-Lawson, J. L. (2007). Improving diabetes self-management through acceptance, mindfulness, and values: A randomized controlled trial. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 75(2), 336-343.
    RCT showing that ACT + patient education is significantly better than patient education alone in producing good self-management and better blood glucose levels in lower SES patients with Type II diabetes. Effects at follow up are mediated by changes in self-management and greater psychological flexibility with regard to diabetes related thoughts and feelings.

Outcome Studies: High-Risk Sexual Behavior

  • Metzler, C. W., Biglan, A., Noell, J., Ary, D., & Ochs, L. (2000). A randomized controlled trial of a behavioral intervention to reduce high-risk sexual behavior among adolescents in STD clinics. Behavior Therapy, 31, 27-54.
    Components from ACT were included as component of a successful program to reduce high risk sexual behavior in adolescents.

Case Studies: Athletic Performance

  • Gardner, F. L. & Moore, Z.E. (2004). A mindfulness-acceptance-commitment based approach to athletic performance enhancement: Theoretical considerations. Behavior Therapy, 35, 707-724.
    Case study. An ACT protocol with an emphasis on mindfulness helps with sports outcomes.

Case Studies: Erectile Dysfunction

  • Montesinos, F. (2003). ACT, sexual desire orientation and erectile dysfunction. A case study. Analisis y Modificación de Conducta, 29, 291-320.
    A successful application of ACT to a 30-year-old male with difficulties in accepting his bisexual orientation and with an erectile dysfunction is presented.
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Smoking Research

Smoking Research

Outcome Studies: Smoking

  • Rosenqvist, D. & Sand, J. (2006). Mindfulness based smoking cessation for groups - an explorative study. Thesis at the Lund University, Sweden.
    6 acceptance and mindfulness group sessions during 35 days including individual homework assignments. 8 of 10 participants completed the program. At 1 mo follow up 50 percent (of 8 completers) were non-smokers, and the rest showed a decrease in smoking at a rate between 45 and 75 percent. Increase of the acceptance aspect of mindfulness was correlated with non-smoking.
  • Gifford, E. V., Kohlenberg, B. S., Hayes, S. C., Antonuccio, D. O., Piasecki, M. M.., Rasmussen-Hall, M. L., & Palm, K. M. (2004). Acceptance theory-based treatment for smoking cessation: An initial trial of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy. Behavior Therapy, 35, 689-705.
    Medium sized randomized controlled trial comparing ACT to nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) as a method of smoking cessation. Quit rates were similar at post but at a one-year follow-up the two groups differed significantly. The ACT group had maintained their gains (35% quit rates) while the NRT quit rates had fallen (less than 10%). Mediational analyses shows that ACT works through acceptance and response flexibility.
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Stress and Burnout Research

Stress and Burnout Research

Outcome Studies: Stress and Burnout

As small study examining whether a group consultation including elements of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy improved adoption compared to a standard 1-day continuing education workshop on Group Drug Counseling (GDC). The group consultation appeared to result in greater adoption as well as greater sense of personal accomplishment ( a burnout subscale). 

  • Blackledge, J. T., & Hayes, S. C. (2006). Using Acceptance and Commitment Training in the Support of Parents of Children Diagnosed with Autism. Child & Family Behavior Therapy, 28(1), 1-18.
    Pre – post study shows that ACT workshop helps parents cope with the stress of raising autistic children.
  • Bond, F. W. & Bunce, D. (2000). Mediators of change in emotion-focused and problem-focused worksite stress management interventions. Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, 5, 156-163.
    Randomized controlled trial. Shows that ACT is more effective than a previously empirically supported behavioral approach to reducing worksite stress and anxiety, and that both are better than a wait list control.

Correlational Studies: Stress and Burnout

  • Bond, F. W., & Flaxman, P. E. (2006). The Ability of Psychological Flexibility and Job Control to Predict Learning, Job Performance, and Mental Health. Journal of Organizational Behavior Management, 26, 113-130.
  • Donaldson, E. & Bond, F.W. (2004). Psychological acceptance and emotional intelligence in relation to workplace well-being. British Journal of Guidance and Counselling, 32, 187-203.
    Study compared experiential avoidance (as measures by the AAQ) and emotional intelligence in terms of their ability to predict general mental health, physical well-being, and job satisfaction in workers (controlling for the effects of job control since this work organisation variable is consistently associated with occupational health and performance). Results from 290 United Kingdom workers showed that emotional intelligence did not significantly predict any of the well-being outcomes, after accounting for acceptance and job control. Acceptance predicted general mental health and physical well-being but not job satisfaction, Job control was associated with job satisfaction, only. Not controlling one’s thoughts and feelings (as advocated by acceptance) may have greater benefits for mental well-being than attempting consciously to regulate them (as emotional intelligence suggests).
  • Bond, F. W. & Bunce, D. (2003). The role of acceptance and job control in mental health, job satisfaction, and work performance. Journal of Applied Psychology, 88, 1057-1067.
    Shows that AAQ predicts positive work outcomes (mental health, satisfaction, performance) even one year later, especially in combination with job control. Re-factors the AAQ and shows that a two factor solution can work on a slightly different 16 item version.
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Weight Maintenance Research

Weight Maintenance Research

Outcome Studies: Weight Maintenance

Micro/Component Studies: Weight Maintenance Outcome Studies: Weight Maintenance

  • Lillis, J. (2008). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for the treatment of obesity-related stigma and sustained weight loss. Unpublished doctoral dissertation. University of Nevada, Reno.

Micro/Component Studies: Weight Maintenance

  • Forman, E.M., Hoffman, K.L., McGrath, K.B., Herbert, J.D., Brandsma, L.L. & Lowe, M.R. (2007). A comparison of acceptance- and control-based strategies for coping with food cravings: An analog study. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 45, 2372-2386.
    98 participants with chocolate cravings were exposed to a CBT-based protocol and an ACT-based protocol or no instructions and required to carry chocolate with them of for two days. Those more impacted by food related cues ate less and had fewer cravings in the ACT condition.

Measurement Development: Weight Maintenance

  • Lillis, J., & Hayes, S. C. (2008). Measuring avoidance and inflexibility in weight related problems. International Journal of Behavior Consultation and Therapy, 4(4), 348-354.
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Articles Comparing ACT to CBT

Articles Comparing ACT to CBT

 

ACT has raised controversy in various wings of CBT, e.g.,

  • Hofmann, S. G. (2008). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: New Wave or Morita Therapy? Clinical Psychology, Science and Practice, 5, 280-285.
  • Öst, L. G. (2008). Efficacy of the third wave of behavioral therapies: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 46(3), 296-321

The relation of ACT to CBT was discussed in the earliest ACT writings. e.g.,

  • Hayes, S. C. (1987). A contextual approach to therapeutic change. In Jacobson, N. (Ed.), Psychotherapists in clinical practice: Cognitive and behavioral perspectives (pp. 327 387). New York: Guilford.

And these more specific criticisms are gradually being answered, e.g.,

  • Hayes, S. C. (2008). Climbing our hills: A beginning conversation on the comparison of ACT and traditional CBT. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice, 5, 286-295.
  • Hayes, S. C. (2008). Avoiding the mistakes of the past. The Behavior Therapist. 29, 150-153.
  • Hayes, S. C., Levin, M., Plumb, J., Boulanger, J., & Pistorello, J. (2013). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and contextual behavioral science: Examining the progress of a distinctive model of behavioral and cognitive therapy. Behavior Therapy, 44, 180–198. doi: 10.1016/j.beth.2009.08.002 PMCID: PMC3635495
  • Atkins, P. W. B., Ciarrochi, J., Gaudiano, B. A., Bricker, J. B., Donald, J., Rovner, G., Smout, M., Livheim, F., Lundgren, T., Hayes, S. C. (2017). Departing from the essential features of a high quality systematic review of psychotherapy: A Response to Öst (2014) and recommendations for improvement. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 97, 259-272. Doi: 10.1016/j.brat.2017.05.016

In the 1980’s Steve Hayes and colleagues did a series of studies which found that cognitive and social learning methods did not work via processes described by these theories. e.g.,

  • Harmon, T. M., Nelson, R. O., & Hayes, S. C. (1980). Self monitoring of mood versus activity by depressed clients. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 48, 30 38.
  • Hayes, S. C., & Nelson, R. O. (1983). Similar reactivity produced by external cues and self monitoring. Behavior Modification, 7, 183 196.
  • Hayes, S. C., Rincover, A., & Volosin, D. (1980). Variables influencing the acquisition and maintenance of aggressive behavior: Modeling versus sensory reinforcement. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 89, 245 262.
  • Hayes, S. C., & Wolf, M. R. (1984). Cues, consequences, and therapeutic talk: Effect of social context and coping statements on pain. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 22, 385-392.
  • Jarrett, R. B., & Nelson, R. O. (1987). Mechanisms of change in cognitive therapy of depression. Behavior Therapy, 18, 227-241.
  • Nelson, R. O., Hayes, S. C., Spong, R. T., Jarrett, R. B., & McKnight, D. L. (1983). Self reinforcement: Appealing misnomer or effective mechanism? Behaviour Research and Therapy, 21, 557 566.
  • Zettle, R. D., & Hayes, S. C. (1982). Rule governed behavior: A potential theoretical framework for cognitive behavior therapy. In P. C. Kendall (Ed.), Advances in cognitive behavioral research and therapy (pp. 73 118). New York: Academic.
  • Zettle, R. D., & Hayes, S. C. (1983). Effect of social context on the impact of coping self statements. Psychological Reports, 52, 391 401.
    ACT followed a whole set of studies that showed that cognitive methods worked because of contextual factors

There is a growing set of empirical articles comparing ACT with traditional BT and CBT methods. Virtually all have shown differences at the level of process, and some in outcome.

  • Lappalainen, R., Lehtonen, T., Skarp, E., Taubert, E., Ojanen, M., & Hayes, S. C. (2007). The impact of CBT and ACT models using psychology trainee therapists: A preliminary controlled effectiveness trial. Behavior Modification, 31, 488-511.

     

    Randomized controlled study in which 14 student therapists treat one client each from an ACT model or a traditional CBT model for 6-8 sessions following a 2 session functional analysis. Participants with any normal outpatient problem were included, mostly anxiety and depression. At post and at the 6 month follow up ACT clients are more improved on the SCL-90 and several other measures. Greater acceptance for ACT patients; great self-confidence for CBT patients. Both correlated with outcomes, but when partial correlations are calculated, only acceptance still relates to outcome.

     

  • Forman, E. M., Herbert, J. D., Moitra, E., Yeomans, P. D., & Geller, P. A. (2007). A randomized controlled effectiveness trial of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and Cognitive Therapy for anxiety and depression. Behavior Modification, 31(6), 772-799.

     

    101 heterogeneous outpatients reporting moderate to severe levels of anxiety or depression were randomly assigned either to traditional CT or to ACT. 23 junior therapists were used. Participants receiving CT and ACT evidenced large and equivalent improvements in depression, anxiety, functioning difficulties, quality of life, life satisfaction and clinician-rated functioning. “Observing” and “describing” one’s experiences mediated outcomes for those in the CT group relative to those in the ACT group, whereas “experiential avoidance,” “acting with awareness” and “acceptance” mediated outcomes for those in the ACT group.

  • Zettle, R. D. & Hayes, S. C. (1986). Dysfunctional control by client verbal behavior: The context of reason giving. The Analysis of Verbal Behavior, 4, 30 38.

     

    Small controlled trial. Shows that ACT is more effective that cognitive therapy for depression when presented in an individual format, and that it works by a different process.

  • Zettle, R. D., & Rains, J. C. (1989). Group cognitive and contextual therapies in treatment of depression. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 45, 438 445.

     

    Small controlled trial. Shows that ACT is as effective as cognitive therapy for depression when presented in a group format, and that it works by a different process.

  • Bond, F. W. & Bunce, D. (2000). Mediators of change in emotion-focused and problem-focused worksite stress management interventions. Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, 5, 156-163.

     

    Randomized controlled trial. Shows that ACT is more effective than a previously empirically supported behavioral approach to reducing worksite stress and anxiety, and that both are better than a wait list control. Process analyses fit the model.

  • Zettle, R. D. (2003). Acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) versus systematic desensitization in treatment of mathematics anxiety. The Psychological Record, 53, 197-215.

     

    Small randomized controlled trial shows that ACT is as good as systematic desensitization in reducing math anxiety, but works according to a different process. Systematic desensitization reduced trait anxiety more than did ACT. The study has been replicated with interesting results:

    Brown, L. A., Forman, E. M., Herbert, J. D., Hoffman, K. L., Yuen, E. K. and Goetter, E. M. (2011). A randomized controlled trial of acceptance-based behavior therapy and cognitive therapy for test anxiety: A pilot study. Behavior Modification, 35, 31-53. Very small RCT (N = 16) for test anxiety comparing ACT (with mindfulness elements) and Beck’s CT. Similar outcomes on self-reports but ACT participants did objectively better on test scores in school.

  • Forman, E. M., Hoffman, K. L., McGrath, K. B., Herbert, J. D., Brandsma, L. L., & Lowe, M. R. (2007). A comparison of acceptance- and control-based strategies for coping with food cravings: An analog study.Behaviour Research and Therapy, 45, 2372-2386.

     

    98 participants with chocolate cravings were exposed to a well known CBT-based protocol (Kelly Brownell’s LEARN program) and an ACT-based protocol or no instructions and required to carry chocolate with them of for two days. Those more impacted by food related cues ate less and had fewer cravings in the ACT condition.

  • Masedo, A. I. & Esteve. M. R. (2006). Effects of suppression, acceptance and spontaneous coping on pain tolerance, pain intensity and distress. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 45, 199-209.

     

    A large and well-controlled randomized study that replicated Hayes, Bissett, Korn, Zettle, Rosenfarb, Cooper, & Grundt, 1999. Acceptance methods drawn from the 1999 ACT book and from the Hayes et al. 1999 pain study (the methods used included an acceptance rationale, practicing awareness of experience, the “Passengers on the Bus” exercise, and the ‘Two Scales Metaphor’) increased pain tolerance and decreased pain ratings in a cold pressor task as compared both to suppression methods (based on thought stopping) and to participants preferred method of coping (which tended to include distraction, relaxation, and keeping the hand still). The latter two conditions did not differ from each other in the main analysis.

    Wetherell, J. L., Afari, N., Rutledge, T., Sorrell, J. T., Stoddard, J. A., Petkus, A. J., Solomon, B. C., Lehman, D. H., Liu, L., Lang, A. J., Hampton Atkinson, J. (2011). A randomized, controlled trial of acceptance and commitment therapy and cognitive-behavioral therapy for chronic pain. Pain, 152, 2098-2107. DOI: 10.1016/j.pain.2011.05.016 RCT (N=114) comparing ACT and traditional CBT for chronic pain. Good outcomes over 6 months. No differences in outcomes. Treatment completers were more satisfied with ACT.

     

    Thorsell, J., Finnes, A., Dahl, J., Lundgren, T., Gybrant, M., Gordh, T., & Buhrman, M. (2011). A comparative study of 2 manual-based self-help interventions, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and Applied Relaxation, for persons with chronic pain. The Clinical Journal of Pain, 27, 716-723. doi: 10.1097/AJP.0b013e318219a933. RCT (N = 90) of ACT versus applied relaxation using a combination of an initial face to face session, a 7 week self-help manual with weekly therapist telephone support, and a concluding face-to-face session. 6 and 12 mo follow up. Better outcomes for ACT in level of function, pain intensity, acceptance, and marginal life satisfaction. Depression and anxiety improved but no diff between conditions.

     

    Rost, A. D., Wilson, K. G., Buchanan, E., Hildebrandt, M.J., & Mutch, D. (in press). Improving psychological adjustment among late-stage ovarian cancer patients: Examining the role of avoidance in treatment. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice. RCT (N = 31; 47 originally but the rest died or entered hospice care) comparing ACT and traditional CBT approaches to women coping with end-stage gynecological cancer. Nice outcomes; dominantly in favor of ACT. By the way CBT is labeled "TAU" -- you have to look at the list of procedures to see that it was CBT.

     

    Arch, J., Eifert, G. H., Davies, C., Vilardaga, J. P., Rose, R. D., & Craske, M. G. (in press). Randomized clinical trial of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) versus acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) for mixed anxiety disorders. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology. RCT (N = 128; 52% female; 33% minority) of 12 sessions of ACT v. tradition CBT for heterogeneous anxiety disorders; both including behavioral exposure. Similar outcomes in several areas through 12 mo F-up but on the primary outcome measure -- blind clinical interviews on the clinical severity of anxiety problems using the ADIS interview -- ACT participants improve more in clinical severity from post to follow up than CBT (it is a very large effect: d = 1.33) and among completers their end-state clinical severity ratings were much better (d = 1.03). Better improvement for ACT in psychological flexibility (medium effect for completers: d = .59) for ACT; better quality of life at follow up (small effect: d = .43) for CBT. 

     

There are also studies showing that ACT methods can empower traditional behavioral methods, e.g.,

More recently studies have explained the effect of some cognitive variables in ACT terms, e.g.,

Some of the history of ACT, including its relation to CBT writ large, can be found in:

  • Zettle, R. D. (2005). The evolution of a contextual approach to therapy: From Comprehensive Distancing to ACT. International Journal of Behavioral Consultation and Therapy, 1(2), 77-89.
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Changing Cultural Practices

Changing Cultural Practices

Part of the ACT/ RFT movement is a "grand vision" to affect positive change on the culture more generally. Groups and organizations engage in practices that harm individuals, families, and the environment, yet there is little scientific understanding of how to bring about changes in these practices.

A number of professionals throughout the world are conducting research on such topics as stigma, prejudice, prevention, advertising, child rearing, and environmental preservation among other important issues.

Here is where you will find information on specific applications of ACT to cultural issues with links to relevant researchers and studies.

Jason Lillis

ACT/ RFT and Prejudice

ACT/ RFT and Prejudice

Despite decades of social concern, racial, ethnic, and religious prejudice persists. Few cultural issues seem more important than figuring out why people hate and how to reduce discriminatory and violent behavior due to prejudice. It seems our survival may depend on our ability as human beings to solve this issue. ACT/ RFT is relevant not just to the needs of the victims of prejudice, discrimination, and terrorism, but also to the understanding and modification of psychological processes that lead to the perpetration of hateful and discriminatory acts.

From an ACT/ RFT perspective, prejudice can be defined as theobjectification and dehumanization of human beings because of their participation in verbal evaluative categories. Prejudice, defined this way, is a kind of verbal entanglement. It is difficult to avoid because some of the same cognitive processes that permit problem-solving also seem to foster prejudice. In addition, may of the things humans do to try and change or eliminate prejudice are either inert or prone to making these processes more resistant to change. Indeed, validated methods for reducing prejudice are very limited.

In this section are links to various ACT and RFT papers related to this topic.

Conceptual papers discussing prejudice/terrorism from an ACT/RFT perspective.

RFT studies related to prejudice and stereotyping

Empirical papers examining the impact of ACT on prejudice and stigma.

  • Self related stigma regarding weight: Lillis, J. (2008). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for the treatment of obesity-related stigma and sustained weight loss. Unpublished doctoral dissertation. University of Nevada, Reno.
  • Prejudice towards ethnic minorities: Lillis, J., & Hayes, S. C. (2007). Applying acceptance, mindfulness, and values to the reduction of prejudice: A pilot study. Behavior Modification, 31(4), 389-411.
    Undergraduates enrolled in two separate classes on racial differences were exposed Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and an educational lecture drawn from a textbook on the psychology of racial differences in a counterbalanced order. Results indicate that only the ACT intervention was effective in increasing positive behavioral intentions at post and a 1-week follow-up. These changes were associated with other self-reported changes that fit with the ACT model.
  • Stigma towards mental health problems: Masuda, A., Hayes, S. C., Fletcher, L. B., Seignourel, P. J., Bunting, K., Herbst, S. A., Twohig, M. P., & Lillis, J. (2007). The impact of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy versus education on stigma toward people with psychological disorders. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 45(11), 2764-2772.
    An RCT comparing ACT and education in 95 college students. ACT reduced mental health stigma significantly regardless of participants’ pre-treatment levels of psychological flexibility, but education reduced stigma only among participants who were relatively flexible and non-avoidant to begin with.
Jason Lillis

Empirical Studies

Empirical Studies

This page was last updated in 2014. For up-to-date information, go to the ACT Randomized Controlled Trials page, the State of the ACT Evidence page, and the Publications section.


The subsections divide the empirical ACT literature into several categories. If you have a study that should be added you can upload the actual publication into the publications section (login to your member account then go here to add a publication to the site).

You can't add the reference to the publication here directly, you have to email that information to the site editor and we will add it ... but if the publication itself is already uploaded we can link the reference here to that file so that people can find it and download it.

You can find outcome studies (Randomized Controlled Trials, RCTs) here.

Steven Hayes

Case Studies

Case Studies

 

Case Studies by Year (Controlled Time Series Studies are covered in the RCT page)

In Press

  • Twohig, M. P. (In Press). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Treatment-Resistant Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: A Case Study.Cognitive and Behavioral Practice.

2008

2007

  • Kleen, M., & Jaspers, J. P. C. (2007). Women should not be allowed to run. Acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) with a pain disorder. Translated from: Vrouwen horen niet hard te lopen. Acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) bij een pijnstoornis. Gedragstherapie, 40, 7-26.

2006

  • García-Montes, J.M., Pérez-Álvarez, M. & Cangas-Díaz, A. (2006). Aproximación al abordaje clínico de los síntomas psicóticos desde la Aceptación. = Approaching clinical intervention for psychotic symptoms from an acceptance perspective . Apuntes de Psicología, 24(1-3), 293-307.
  • Ruiz-Jiménez, F. J. (2006). Aplicación de la Terapia de Aceptación y Compromiso (ACT) Para el Incremento del Rendimiento Ajedrecí¬stico. Un Estudio de Caso [Application of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) to Improve Chess-players Performance. A Case Study.International Journal of Psychology and Psychological Therapy, 6, 77-97.

2005

  • Batten, S. V., & Hayes, S. C. (2005). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy in the Treatment of Comorbid Substance Abuse and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder: A Case Study. Clinical Case Studies, 4(3), 246-262.
    Case study. Shows improvement with a dually diagnosed patient.
  • Olivencia, J. J., & Díaz, A. J. C. (2005). Tratamiento psicológico del trastorno esquizotípico de la personalidad. Un estudio de caso. (Psychological treatment of schizotypal personality disorder. A case study). Psicothema, 17, 412-417.
    A case study that examines a combination of ACT and FAP in the successful treatment of a case of Schizotypal Personality Disorder.
  • Orsillo SM, Batten SV. (2005). Acceptance and commitment therapy in the treatment of posttraumatic stress disorder. Behavior Modification, 29, 95-129.
    Discussion article and case study showing how to apply ACT to the treatment of PTSD.
  • Wicksell, R. K., Dahl, J., Magnusson, B., & Olsson, G. L. (2005). Using Acceptance and Commitment Therapy in the rehabilitation of an adolescent female with chronic pain: A case example. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 12, 415-423. Shows dramatic improvement with a 14 year old chronic pain patient using a values focused ACT protocol.

2004

  • Gardner, F. L. & Moore, Z.E. (2004). A mindfulness-acceptance-commitment based approach to athletic performance enhancement: Theoretical considerations. Behavior Therapy, 35, 707-724.
    Case study. An ACT protocol with an emphasis on mindfulness helps with sports outcomes.

2003

  • Heffner, M., Eifert, G. H., Parker, B. T., Hernandez, D. H. and Sperry, J. A. (2003). Valued directions: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy in the treatment of alcohol dependence. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 10, 378-38.
    This case study describes a heavily values focused ACT treatment of a case of alcohol dependence within an Acceptance and Commitment Therapy model. Identifying valued directions seemed to help the client achieve sobriety and put a plan into action to "start living."
  • Montesinos, F. (2003). ACT, sexual desire orientation and erectile dysfunction. A case study. Analisis y Modificación de Conducta, 29, 291-320.
    A successful application of ACT to a 30-year-old male with difficulties in accepting his bisexual orientation and with an erectile dysfunction is presented.
  • Pankey, J. & Hayes, S. C. (2003). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for psychosis. International Journal of Psychology and Psychological Therapy, 3, 311-328.
    Case study with a retarded psychotic person experiencing command hallucinations and multiple delusions. Believability drops dramatically over treatment but not frequency. Good functional improvement.

2002

  • Heffner, M., Sperry, J., Eifert, G. H. & Detweiler, M. (2002). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy in the treatment of an adolescent female with anorexia nervosa: A case example. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 9, 232-236.
    Describes the use of ACT in anorexia and shows resulting data. Case study. The case study is followed by discussion articles:
    • Wilson, K. G. & Roberts, M. (2002). Core principles in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: An application to anorexia. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 9, 237-243.
    • Hayes, S. C. & Pankey, J. (2002). Experiential avoidance, cognitive fusion, and an ACT approach to anorexia nervosa. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 9, 243-247.
    • Orsillo, S. M. & Batten, S. J. (2002). ACT as treatment of a disorder of excessive control: Anorexia. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 9, 253-259.
    • There is also a cognitive paper that is nominally a response to the case, but it mentions ACT only in passing, focusing instead on the traditional CBT model.
  • López, S. & Arco, J.L. (2002). ACT como alternativa terapéutica a pacientes que no responden a tratamientos tradicionales: un estudio de caso [ACT as an alternative for patients that do not respond to traditional treatments: A case study]. Análisis y Modificación de Conducta, 120, 585-616.
    Presents data on ACT with a patient who failed a course of cognitive therapy.

2001

  • García, J.M. & Pérez, M. (2001). ACT as a treatment for psychotic symptoms. The case of auditory hallucinations. Análisis y Modificación de Conducta, 27, 113, 455-472.
    Describes the use of ACT in the treatment of psychotic disorders and shows resulting data. Case study.
  • Luciano, C. (2001). On the Experiential Avoidance Disorder and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT). Análisis y Modificación de Conducta, 27, 113, 317-332. A case study on ACT.
  • Luciano, C. (2001) (Ed.), Terapia de Aceptación y Compromiso (ACT) y el Traastorno de Evitación Experiencial. Un síntesis de casos clínicos. (Ed.) Valencia: Promolibro.
  • Luciano, C. & Cabello, F. (2001). Bereavement and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT). Análisis y Modificación de Conducta, 27, 113, 399-424.
    Describes the use of ACT in the treatment of complicated bereavement and shows resulting data. Case study.
  • Luciano, C., & Gutierrez, O. (2001). Anxiety and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT). Análisis y Modificación de Conducta, 27, 113, 373-398.
    Describes the use of ACT in the treatment of anxiety problems and shows resulting data. Case study.
  • Zaldívar, F. & Hernández, M. (2001). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT): Application to an experiential avoidance with agoraphobic form. Análisis y Modificación de Conducta, 27, 113, 425-454.
    Describes the use of ACT in the treatment of agoraphobia and shows resulting data. Case study.

2000

  • Carrascoso López, F. J. (2000). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) in Panic Disorder with Agoraphobia: A Case Study. Psychology in Spain, 4(1), 120-128.
  • Garcia, R. F. (2000). Application of acceptance and commitment therapy in an example of experiential avoidance. Psicothema, 12, 445-450.

1999 and Earlier (First ACT Book Appears in 1999)

  • Biglan, A. (1989). A contextual approach to the clinical treatment of parental distress. In G. H. S. Singer & L. K. Irvin (Eds.), Support for caregiving families: Enabling positive adaptation to disability (pp. 299-311). Baltimore, MD: Brookes.
    Uncontrolled. Presents case data on the use of ACT components with families.
  • Hayes, S. C. (1987). A contextual approach to therapeutic change. In N. Jacobson (Ed.), Psychotherapists in clinical practice: Cognitive and behavioral perspectives (pp. 327-387). New York: Guilford Press.
    Shows a series of uncontrolled case evaluations on ACT with anxiety problems.
Steven Hayes

Correlational studies

Correlational studies

Correlational studies on ACT-Related Processes by Year

See also the experimental psychopathology page

In Press

2009

2008

  • Boelen, P.A. & Reijntjes, A. (2008). Measuring experiential avoidance: Reliability and validity of the Dutch 9-item acceptance and action questionnaire (AAQ). Journal of Psychopathology and Behavioral Assessment, 30, 241-251.
  • Kashdan, T. B., & Breen, W. E. (2008). Social anxiety and positive emotions: A prospective examination of a self-regulatory model with tendencies to suppress or express emotions as a moderating variable. Behavior Therapy, 39, 1-12.
  • Leonard, L. M., Iverson, K. M. & Follette, V. M. (2008). Sexual functioning and sexual satisfaction among women who report a history of childhood and/or adolescent sexual abuse. Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy, 34, 375-384.
  • McCracken, L. M. & Yang, S. (2008). A Contextual Cognitive-Behavioral Analysis of Rehabilitation Workers’ Health and Well-Being: Influences of Acceptance, Mindfulness, and Values-Based Action. Rehabilitation Psychology, 53(4), 479-485.
  • Ostafin, B. D. & Marlatt, G. A. (2008). Surfing the urge: Experiential acceptance moderates the relation between automatic alcohol motivation and hazardous drinking. Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 27(4), 404-418.
  • Tull, M.T. & Gratz, K.L. (2008). Further examination of the relationship between anxiety sensitivity and depression: The mediating role of experiential avoidance and difficulties engaging in goal-directed behavior when distressed. Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 22(2), 199-210.
  • Tull, M.T., Rodman, S.A. & Roemer, L. (2008). An examination of the fear of bodily sensations and body hypervigilance as predictors of emotion regulation difficulties among individuals with a recent history of uncued panic attacks. Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 22(4), 750-760.

2007

  • Andrew, D.H. & Dulin, P.L. (2007). The relationship between self-reported health and mental health problems among older adults in New Zealand: Experiential avoidance as a moderator. Aging and mental health, 11(5), 596-603.
  • Butler, J., & Ciarrochi, J. (2007). Psychological Acceptance and Quality of Life in the Elderly. Quality of Life Research, 16, 607-615.
    In a sample of 187 elderly those higher in psychological acceptance had higher quality of life in the areas of health, safety, community participation and emotional well-being; and had less adverse psychological reactions to decreasing productivity.
  • Chapman, A. L. & Cellucci, T. (2007). The role of antisocial and borderline personality features in substance dependence among incarcerated females. Addictive Behaviors, 32, 1131-1145.
  • Gold, S.D., Marx, B.P. & Lexington, J.M. (2007). Gay male sexual assault survivors: The relations among internalized homophobia, experiential avoidance, and psychological symptom severity. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 45(3), 549-562.
  • Kashdan, T. B., & Breen, W. E. (2007). Materialism and diminished well-being: Experiential avoidance as a mediating mechanism. Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 26, 521-539.
    This correlational study examined the hypothesis that experiential avoidance mediates associations between excessively materialistic values and diminished emotional well-being, meaning in life, self-determination, and gratitude. Results indicated that people with high materialistic values reported more negative emotions and less relatedness, autonomy, competence, gratitude, positive emotions, and sense of meaning – all of these relations were mediated by experiential avoidance mediated all of these relations. Emotional disturbances such as social anxiety and depressive symptoms failed to account for these findings after accounting for shared variance with experiential avoidance.
  • McCracken, L. M., & Vowles, K. E. (2007). Psychological flexibility and traditional pain management strategies in relation to patient functioning with chronic pain: An examination of a revised instrument. Journal of Pain, 8, 339-349.
  • Morina, N. (2007). The role of experiential avoidance in psychological functioning after war-related stress in Kosovar civilians. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 195(8), 697-700.
  • Norberg, M. M., Wetterneck, C. T., Woods, D. W., & Conelea, C. A. (2007). Examination of the mediating role of psychological acceptance in relationships between cognitions and severity of chronic hairpulling. Behavior Modification, 31, 367 – 381.
    Correlational study with 730+ folks suffering from trichotillomania. Experiential avoidance as measured by the AAQ fully mediated the rela¬tionship between hair-pulling and both fears of negative evaluation and feelings of shame and partially mediated the relationship between hair-pulling severity and dysfunctional beliefs about appearance.
  • Tull, M.T., Jakupcak, M. & Paulson, A. (2007). The role of emotional inexpressivity and experiential avoidance in the relationship between posttraumatic stress disorder symptom severity and aggressive behavior among men exposed to interpersonal violence. Anxiety, Stress & Coping: An International Journal, 20(4), 337-351.
  • Tull, M. T., & Roemer, L. (2007). Emotion regulation difficulties associated with the experience of uncued panic attacks: Evidence of experiential avoidance, emotional nonacceptance, and decreased emotional clarity. Behavior Therapy, 38(4), 378-391.

2006

  • Bond, F. W., & Flaxman, P. E. (2006). The Ability of Psychological Flexibility and Job Control to Predict Learning, Job Performance, and Mental Health. Journal of Organizational Behavior Management, 26, 113-130.
  • Flessner, D. A., & Woods, D. W. (2006). Phenomenological characteristics, social problems, and the economic impact associated with chronic skin picking. Behavior Modification, 30, 944-963.
    Found that the impact of skin picking on depression and anxiety was partially mediated by the AAQ in a non-referred sample of chronic skin pickers.
  • Gaudiano, B. A., & Herbert, J. D. (2006). Believability of hallucinations as a potential mediator of their frequency and associated distress in psychotic inpatients. Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy, 34, 497–502.
  • Kashdan, T.B., Barrios, V., Forsyth, J.P., & Steger, M.F. (2006). Experiential avoidance as a generalized psychological vulnerability: Comparisons with coping and emotion regulation strategies. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 44, 1301-1320.
    two studies, one correlational and one longitudinal, show that experiential avoidance as measured by the AAQ fully or partially mediated the relationships between coping and emotion regulation strategies on anxiety-related pathology, (Sutdy 1) and psychological distress and hedonic functioning over the course of a 21-day monitoring period (Study 2). The variables examined included maladaptive coping, emotional responses styles, and uncontrollability on anxiety-related distress (e.g., anxiety sensitivity, trait anxiety, suffocation fears, and body sensation fears), and suppression and cognitive reappraisal on daily negative and positive experiences. The data showed that cognitive reappraisal, a primary process of traditional cognitive-behavior therapy, was much less predictive of the quality of psychological experiences and events in everyday life compared with EA.
  • Kashdan, T. B., & Steger, M. (2006). Expanding the topography of social anxiety: An experience sampling assessment of positive emotions and events, and emotion suppression. Psychological Science, 17, 120-128.
    In a 21-day experience sampling study, dispositional social anxiety, emotional suppression, and cognitive reappraisal was compared daily measures of social anxiety. Socially anxious individuals reported the lowest rate of positive events on days when they were more socially anxious and tended to suppress emotions, and the highest rate of positive events on days when they were less socially anxious and more accepting of emotional experiences. Irrespective of dispositional social anxiety, participants reported the most intense positive emotions on days when they were less socially anxious and more accepting of emotional experiences.
  • McCracken, L. M. (2006). Toward a fully functional, flexible, and defused approach to pain in young people. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 13, 182-184.
  • Reddy, M.K., Pickett, S.M. & Orcutt, H.K. (2006). Experiential avoidance as a mediator in the relationship between childhood psychological abuse and current mental health symptoms in college students. Journal of Emotional Abuse, 6(1), 67-85.
  • Tull, M.T., Gratz, K.L., & Lacroce, D.M. (2006). The role of anxiety sensitivity and lack of emotional approach coping in depressive symptom severity among a non-clinical sample of uncued panickers. Cognitive Behaviour Therapy, 35(2), 74-87.

2005

  • Greco, L. A., Heffner, M., Ritchie, S., Polak, M., Poe, S., & Lynch, S. K., (2005). Maternal adjustment following preterm birth: Contributions of experiential avoidance. Behavior Therapy, 36, 177-184.
    Experiential avoidance as measured by the AAQ correlated positively with post-discharge parental stress and traumatic stress symptoms surrounding preterm birth. Moreover, it partially mediated the association between stress during delivery and later traumatic stress symptoms. This process was not moderated by parent reports of child temperament or perceived social support, suggesting that experiential avoidance plays a mediating role irrespective of child characteristics or perceived support from family members and close friends.
  • Marx, B.P. & Sloan, D.M. (2005). Experiential avoidance, peritraumatic dissociation, and post-traumatic stress disorder. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 43, 569-583.
    185 trauma survivors were assessed for peritraumatic dissociation, experiential avoidance (using the AAQ), and PTSD symptom severity. Both peritraumatic dissociation and experiential avoidance were significantly related to PTSD symptoms at baseline. After the initial levels of PTSD was taken into account, only experiential avoidance was related to PTSD symptoms both 4- and 8-weeks later.
  • McCracken, L. M. (2005). Social context and acceptance of chronic pain: The role of solicitous and punishing responses. Pain, 113, 155-159.
  • Orcutt, H. K., Pickett, S., & Pope, E. (2005). Experiential avoidance and forgiveness as mediators in the relation between traumatic life events and PTSD symptoms. Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 24, 1003–1029.
  • Roemer, L., Salters, K., Raffa, S. D., & Orsillo, S. M. (2005). Fear and avoidance of internal experiences in GAD: Preliminary tests of a conceptual model. Cognitive Therapy and Research, 29, 71-88.
    Correlational study. Shows that the AAQ is associated with GAD symptoms in both clinical and non-clinical populations.

2004

  • Begotka, A. M., Woods, D. W., & Wetterneck, C. T. (2004). The relationship between experiential avoidance and the severity of trichotillomania in a nonreferred sample. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry, 35, 17-24.
    In a large sample of adults suffering from trichotillomania, experiential avoidance as measured by the 9 item AAQ correlated with more frequent and intense urges to pull, less ability to control urges, and more pulling-related distress than persons who were not experientially avoidant. Actual pulling did not differ.
  • Donaldson, E. & Bond, F.W. (2004). Psychological acceptance and emotional intelligence in relation to workplace well-being. British Journal of Guidance and Counselling, 32, 187-203.
    Study compared experiential avoidance (as measures by the AAQ) and emotional intelligence in terms of their ability to predict general mental health, physical well-being, and job satisfaction in workers (controlling for the effects of job control since this work organisation variable is consistently associated with occupational health and performance). Results from 290 United Kingdom workers showed that emotional intelligence did not significantly predict any of the well-being outcomes, after accounting for acceptance and job control. Acceptance predicted general mental health and physical well-being but not job satisfaction, Job control was associated with job satisfaction, only. Not controlling one’s thoughts and feelings (as advocated by acceptance) may have greater benefits for mental well-being than attempting consciously to regulate them (as emotional intelligence suggests).

The AAQ validation study. Over 2000 subjects. Validates both a 9 and 16 item version, both single factor.

  • Mairal, J. B. (2004). Spanish Adaptation of the Acceptance and Action Questionnaire (AAQ). International Journal of Psychology and Psychological Therapy, 4, 505-515.
  • Plumb, J. C., Orsillo, S. M., & Luterek, J. A. (2004). A preliminary test of the role of experiential avoidance in post-event functioning. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry, 35, 245-257.
    Correlational study. Showed that experiential avoidance was correlated with post-traumatic symptomatology over and above other measures of psychological functioning.
  • Tull, M. T., Gratz, K. L., Salters, K., & Roemer, L. (2004). The role of experiential avoidance in posttraumatic stress symptoms and symptoms of depression, anxiety, and somatization. Journal of Nervous & Mental Disease, 192(11), 754-761.
    Correlational study. Among a sample of individuals exposed to multiple potentially traumatic events, general experiential avoidance (but not thought suppression in particular), predicted symptoms of depression, anxiety, and somatization when controlling for posttraumatic stress symptom severity. Thought suppression (but not experiential avoidance) was associated with severity of posttraumatic stress symptoms when controlling for their shared relationship with general psychiatric symptom severity.

2003

  • Bond, F. W. & Bunce, D. (2003). The role of acceptance and job control in mental health, job satisfaction, and work performance. Journal of Applied Psychology, 88, 1057-1067.
    Shows that AAQ predicts positive work outcomes (mental health, satisfaction, performance) even one year later, especially in combination with job control. Re-factors the AAQ and shows that a two factor solution can work on a slightly different 16 item version.
  • Forsyth, J. P., Parker, J. D., & Finlay, C. G. (2003). Anxiety sensitivity, controllability, and experiential avoidance and their relation to drug of choice and addiction severity in a residential sample of substance-abusing veterans. Addictive Behaviors, 28(5), 851-870.
  • Tull, M.T., & Roemer, L. (2003). Alternative explanations for emotional numbing of posttraumatic stress disorder: An examination of hyperarousal and experiential avoidance. Journal of Psychopathology and Behavioral Assessment, 25, 147-154.

2002

  • Marx, B. P. & Sloan, D. M. (2002). The role of emotion in the psychological functioning of adult survivors of childhood sexual abuse. Behavior Therapy, 33, 563-577.
    Correlational study showing that childhood sexual abuse (CSA), experiential avoidance and emotional expressivity were significantly related to psychological distress. However, only experiential avoidance mediated the relationship between CSA and current distress.

2001

  • Batten, S. V., Follette, V.M., & Aban, I (2001). Experiential Avoidance and high risk sexual behavior in survivors of child sexual abuse. Journal of Child Sexual Abuse, 10(2), 101-120.
    This is a correlational study (N = 283) showing that generalized experiential avoidance accounted for 67% of the variance in distress in a sexually abused population.

1999 and earlier

  • McCracken, L. M. (1999). Behavioral constituents of chronic pain acceptance: Results from factor analysis of the Chronic Pain Acceptance Questionnaire. Journal of Back & Musculoskeletal Rehabilitation, 13, 93-100.
  • McCracken, L. M. (1998). Learning to live with the pain: acceptance of pain predicts adjustment in persons with chronic pain. Pain, 74, 21-27.
    This study is based on a pain related early version of the AAQ. Greater acceptance of pain was associated with reports of lower pain intensity, less pain-related anxiety and avoidance, less depression, less physical and psychosocial disability, more daily uptime, and better work status. A relatively low correlation between acceptance and pain intensity showed that acceptance is not simply a function of having a low level of pain. Regression analyses showed that acceptance of pain predicted better adjustment on all other measures of patient function, independent of perceived pain intensity. This work is replicated, refined and extended in McCracken, L. M. & Eccleston, C. (2003). Coping or acceptance: What to do about chronic pain. Pain, 105, 197-204. and McCracken, L. M. , Vowles, K. E., & Eccleston, C. (2004). Acceptance of chronic pain: Component analysis and a revised assessment method. Pain, 107, 159-166.
Steven Hayes

Effectiveness Articles

Effectiveness Articles
  • Vowles, K. E., & McCracken, L. M. (2008). Acceptance and values-based action in chronic pain: A study of effectiveness and treatment process. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 76, 397-407.

Participants included 171 completers of an interdisciplinary treatment program, 66.7% of whom completed a 3-month follow-up assessment as well. Results indicated significant improvements for pain, depression, pain-related anxiety, disability, medical visits, work status, and physical performance. Effect size statistics were uniformly medium or larger. According to reliable change analyses, 75.4% of patients demonstrated improvement in at least one key domain. Both acceptance of pain and values-based action improved, and increases in these processes were associated with improvements in the primary outcome domains.

101 heterogeneous outpatients reporting moderate to severe levels of anxiety or depression were randomly assigned either to traditional CT or to ACT. 23 junior therapists were used. Participants receiving CT and ACT evidenced large and equivalent improvements in depression, anxiety, functioning difficulties, quality of life, life satisfaction and clinician-rated functioning. “Observing” and “describing” one’s experiences mediated outcomes for those in the CT group relative to those in the ACT group, whereas “experiential avoidance,” “acting with awareness” and “acceptance” mediated outcomes for those in the ACT group.
Randomized controlled study in which 14 student therapists treat one client each from an ACT model or a traditional CBT model for 6-8 sessions following a 2 session functional analysis. Participants with any normal outpatient problem were included. At post and at the 6 month follow up ACT clients are more improved on the SCL-90 and several other measures. Greater acceptance for ACT patients; great self-confidence for CBT patients. Both correlated with outcomes, but when partial correlations are calculated, only acceptance still relates to outcome.
108 chronic pain patients with a long history of treatment are followed through an ACT-based 3-4 week residential treatment program. Measures improved from initial assessment to pre-treatment on average only 3% (average of 3.9 month wait), but improved on average 34% following treatment. 81% of these gains were retained through a 3 month follow up. Changes in acceptance predicted positive changes in depression, pain related anxiety, physical disability, psychosocial disability, and the ability to stand. Positive outcomes were also seen in a timed walk, decreased medical visits, daily rest due to pain, pain intensity, and decreased pain medication use.
Controlled effectiveness trial. Not randomized. Shows that training in ACT produces generally more effective clinicians, as measured by client outcomes.

Steven Hayes

Experimental Psychopathology and Component Studies

Experimental Psychopathology and Component Studies

Experimental Psychopathology and Component Studies by Year

Below is a list of experimental psychopathology and analogue studies testing components of ACT. 

2009

2008

  • Degen, L.M. (2008)Acceptance-based emotion regulation, perceptions of control, state mindfulness, anxiety sensitivity, and experiential avoidance: Predicting response to hyperventilation. Unpublished doctoral dissertation. American University.

2007

  • Cochrane, A., Barnes-Holmes, D., Barnes-Holmes, Y., Stewart, I., & Luciano, C. (2007). Experiential avoidance and aversive visual images: Response delays and event related potentials on a simple matching task. Behavior Research and Therapy, 45, 1379-1388.
    Two experiments. In Experiment 1, participants high (n = 15) or low in avoidance (n = 14), as measured by the Acceptance and Action Questionnaire, completed a simple matching task that required them to choose whether or not to look at an aversive visual image. Only the high-avoidance participants took longer to emit a correct response that produced an aversive rather than a neutral picture. Additionally, the high-avoiders reported greater levels of anxiety following the experiment even though they rated the aversive images as less unpleasant and less emotionally arousing than their low-avoidant counterparts. In Experiment 2, three groups, representing high- mid- and low-avoidance (n = 6 in each) repeated the matching task with the additional recording of event related potentials (ERPs). The findings replicated Experiment 1 but also showed that high-EA subjects had significantly greater negativity for electrodes over the left hemisphere relative to the midline suggesting that the high-EA group engaged in verbal strategies to regulate their emotional responses.
  • Forman, E.M., Hoffman, K.L., McGrath, K.B., Herbert, J.D., Brandsma, L.L. & Lowe, M.R. (2007). A comparison of acceptance- and control-based strategies for coping with food cravings: An analog study.Behaviour Research and Therapy, 45, 2372-2386.
    98 participants with chocolate cravings were exposed to a CBT-based protocol and an ACT-based protocol or no instructions and required to carry chocolate with them of for two days. Those more impacted by food related cues ate less and had fewer cravings in the ACT condition.
  • Gratz, K.L., Bornovalova, M.A., Delany-Brumsey, A., Bettina, N. & Lejuez, C.W. (2007). A laboratory-based study of the relationship between childhood abuse and experiential avoidance among inner-city substance users: The role of emotional nonacceptance. Behavior Therapy, 38(3), 256-268.
  • Marcks, B.A. & Woods, D.W. (2007). Role of thought-related beliefs and coping strategies in the escalation of intrusive thoughts: An analog to obsessive-compulsive disorder. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 45, 2640–2651.
  • Masedo, A.I. & Esteve, M.R. (2007). Effects of suppression, acceptance and spontaneous coping on pain tolerance, pain intensity and distress. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 45, 199-209.
    A large and well-controlled randomized study that replicated Hayes, Bissett, Korn, Zettle, Rosenfarb, Cooper, & Grundt, 1999. Acceptance methods drawn from the 1999 ACT book and from the Hayes et al. 1999 pain study (the methods used included an acceptance rationale, practicing awareness of experience, the “Passengers on the Bus” exercise, and the ‘Two Scales Metaphor’) increased pain tolerance and decreased pain ratings in a cold pressor task as compared both to suppression methods (based on thought stopping) and to participants preferred method of coping (which tended to include distraction, relaxation, and keeping the hand still). The latter two conditions did not differ from each other in the main analysis.
  • Roche, B., Forsyth, J.P. & Maher, E. (2007). The impact of demand characteristics on brief acceptance- and control-based interventions for pain tolerance. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 14, 381-393.
  • Tull, M.T. & Roemer, L. (2007). Emotion regulation difficulties associated with the experience of uncued panic attacks: Evidence of experiential avoidance, emotional nonacceptance, and decreased emotional clarity. Behavior Therapy, 38(4), 378-391.

2006

  • Campbell-Sills, L., Barlow, D. H., Brown, T. A., & Hofmann, S. G. (2006). Effects of suppression and acceptance on emotional responses of individuals with anxiety and mood disorders. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 44, 1251-1263.
    Similar to the study above, brief acceptance methods led to lower heart rate during exposure to an aversive film and less negative affect during the post-film recovery period that did control strategies in individuals with anxiety and mood disorders.
  • Campbell-Sills, L., Barlow, D. H., Brown, T. A., & Hofmann, S. G. (2006). Acceptability and suppression of negative emotion in anxiety and mood disorders. Emotion, 6(4), 587–595.
    This study compared the responses of participants from a clinical and non-clinical sample to an emotion provoking film. The study found that participants from the clinical group spontaneously used suppression to a greater degree than non-clinical participants and that attempts at suppression were associated with greater distress.
  • Cohen, G.L., Garcia, J., Apfel, N. & Master, A. (2006). Reducing the racial achievement gap: A social-psychological intervention. Science, 313, 1307-1310.
  • Williams, L.M. (2006). Acceptance and commitment therapy: An example of third-wave therapy as a treatment for Australian Vietnam War veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder: Unpublished dissertation, Charles Sturt University, Bathurst, New South Wales.

2005

  • Keogh, E., Bond, F. W., Hanmer, R. & Tilston, J. (2005). Comparing acceptance and control-based coping instructions on the cold-pressor pain experiences of healthy men and women. European Journal of Pain, 9, 591-598.
    Simple acceptance-based coping instructions improved affective pain more than distraction but only for women.
    Tested acceptance- and control-based instructions in a cold pressor task. The result showed that the acceptance-based coping strategy could reduce self-reported pain, and that males and females reacted to the coping strategies differently. Females produced lower pain level following the acceptance-based strategy than males.
  • Marcks, B. A. & Woods, D. W. (2005). A comparison of thought suppression to an acceptance-based technique in the management of personal intrusive thoughts: A controlled evaluation. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 43, 433-445.
    Two studies. Correlational study shows suppressing personally relevant intrusive thoughts is associated with more thoughts, more distress, greater urge to do something. Those who accept are less obsessional, depressed and anxious. Experimental study shows that instructions to suppress does not work and leads to increased level of distress; instructions of accept (using a couple of short metaphors drawn from the ACT book) decreases discomfort but not thought frequency.
  • Zettle, R. D., Hocker, T. R., Mick, K. A., Scofield, B. E., Petersen, C. L., Hyunsung S., & Sudarijanto, R. P. (2005). Differential strategies in coping with pain as a function of level of experiential avoidance. The Psychological Record, 55(4), 511-524.
    Correlational. High versus low EA participants show differences in pain tolerance and in pain coping.

2004

  • Masuda, A., Hayes, S. C., Sackett, C. F., & Twohig, M. P. (2004). Cognitive defusion and self-relevant negative thoughts: Examining the impact of a ninety year old technique. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 42, 477-485.
    Shows in a series of time-series designs and a group study, that the “milk, milk, milk” defusion technique reduces distress and believability of negative self-referential thoughts.
  • Gutiérrez, O., Luciano, C., Rodríguez, M., & Fink, B. C. (2004). Comparison between an acceptance-based and a cognitive-control-based protocol for coping with pain. Behavior Therapy, 35, 767-784.
    Randomized study with analogue pain task showing greater tolerance for pain in the defusion and acceptance-based condition drawn from ACT as compared to a closely parallel cognitive-control based condition.
  • Karekla, M., Forsyth, J. P., & Kelly, M. M. (2004). Emotional avoidance and panicogenic responding to a biological challenge procedure.Behavior Therapy, 35, 725-746.
    Normal participants high or low on the AAQ were exposed to a CO2 challenge. High emotional avoiders reported more panic symptoms than low avoiders. No difference physiologically.
  • Levitt, J. T., Brown, T. A., Orsillo, S. M., & Barlow, D. H. (2004). The effects of acceptance versus suppression of emotion on subjective and psychophysiological response to carbon dioxide challenge in patients with panic disorder. Behavior Therapy, 35, 747-766.
    Acceptance methods (drawn directly from the ACT book) did a better job than control strategies in promoting successful exposure in panic disordered patients.
  • Sloan, D. M. (2004). Emotion regulation in action: Emotional reactivity in experiential avoidance. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 42, 1257-1270.
    Examined the relationship between emotional reactivity (self-report and physiological reactivity) to pleasant, unpleasant, and neutral emotion-eliciting stimuli and experiential avoidance as measured by the AAQ. Sixty-two participants were separated into high and low experiential avoiders. Results indicated that high EA participants reported greater emotional experience to both unpleasant and pleasant stimuli compared to low EA participants. In contrast to their heightened reports of emotion, high EA participants displayed attenuated heart rate reactivity to the unpleasant stimuli relative to the low EA participants. Findings were interpreted as reflecting an emotion regulation attempt by high EA participants when confronted with unpleasant emotion-evocative stimuli.
  • Spira, A. P., Zvolensky, M. J., Eifert, G. H., & Feldner, M. T. (2004). Avoidance-oriented coping as a predictor of anxiety-based physical stress: A test using biological challenge. Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 18, 309–323.

2003

  • Eifert, G. H. & Heffner, M. (2003). The effects of acceptance versus control contexts on avoidance of panic-related symptoms. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry, 34, 293-312.
    Randomized study comparing control versus acceptance during a CO2 challenge with anxious subjects. Acceptance oriented exercise (the finger trap) reduced avoidance, anxiety symptoms, and anxious cognitions as compared to breathing training.
  • Feldner, M. T., Zvolensky, M. J., Eifert, G. H., & Spira, A. P. (2003). Emotional avoidance: An experimental tests of individual differences and response suppression during biological challenge. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 41, 403-411.
    High emotional avoidance subjects showed more anxiety in response to CO2, particularly when instructed to suppress their emotions.
  • Hopkinson, J. & Neuringer, A. (2003). Modifying behavioral variability in moderately depressed students. Behavior Modification, 27(2), 251-264.

2002

  • Takahashi, M., Muto, T., Tada, M., & Sugiyama, M. (2002). Acceptance rationale and increasing pain tolerance: Acceptance-based and FEAR-based practice. Japanese Journal of Behavior Therapy, 28, 35-46.
    Small randomized trial that replicated Hayes, Bissett, Korn, Zettle, Rosenfarb, Cooper, & Grundt, 1999. An acceptance rationale plus two ACT defusion exercises (leaves on the stream and physicalizing) did significantly better than a match control focused intervention on pain tolerance, or a lecture on pain.

1999 or Before

Steven Hayes

Qualitative Studies

Qualitative Studies

Qualitative Studies by Year (including Mixed Methods)

2014

  • Bacon, T., Farhall, J., & Fossey, E. (2014). The active therapeutic processes of acceptance and commitment therapy for persistent symptoms of psychosis: Clients’ perspectives. Behavioural and cognitive psychotherapy, 42(04), 402-420.

2013

  • Barker, E., & McCracken, L. M. (2013). From traditional cognitive–behavioural therapy to acceptance and commitment therapy for chronic pain: a mixed-methods study of staff experiences of change. British Journal of Pain, 2049463713498865.
Mick Darby

Reviews of the Empirical Literature

Reviews of the Empirical Literature

Empirical Reviews of ACT Data

2010

  • Ruiz, F. J. (2010). A review of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) empirical evidence: Correlational, experimental psychopathology, component and outcome studies. International Journal of Psychology and Psychological Therapy, 10, 125-162.

2008

  • Öst, L. G. (2008). Efficacy of the third wave of behavioral therapies: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 46(3), 296-321

2006

Meta-analysis of ACT process evidence and ACT outcomes, current through Summer 2005.

2004

Tutorial review of the ACT literature current through late 2003.
Steven Hayes

Studies Underway that We Know About

Studies Underway that We Know About

Projects underway or recently completed that we know about

Frank Bond has completed and is writing up two replications and extensions of the Bond and Bunce 2000 study

Fredrick Livheim (livheim@hotmail.com) has conducted a randomized prevention trial with ACT in a school setting. Sigificantly better stress outcomes including at a 6 month follow up

Heather Nash who was at University of Alaska, has relocated to Las Vegas. She has a study of ACT with eating disorders using a multiple baseline

John Forsyth and Maria Karekla (University of Albany) ran a small RCT comparing an Acceptance Framed version of Panic Control Therapy vs. a "treatment as usual" version of Panic Control Therapy for persons suffering from panic disorder. The results are being written up. Persons in the ACT Framed condition were  less likely to drop out of treatment just prior to interoceptive exposure compared with the TAU condition.

John Forsyth and Sean Sheppard (University at Albany) are about to submit a write up of a large RCT comparing the effectiveness of The Mindfulness & Acceptance Workbook for Anxiety in a National and International sample of people who view their anxiety and fear as a significant problem for them.

John Forsyth, Ed Hickling, Dan Silverman have conducted an effectiveness study evaluating a half day ACT workshop for people suffering from Multiple Sclerosis (MS). The study includes pre-workshop assessment and a 3 month follow-up, plus a treatment seeking MS control group that did not get the workshop. The workshop significantly reduced depression (from moderate-to-severe range to mild range), thought suppression, and pain interference on quality of life.

Similar ACT-based anxiety protocols are being tested by Jill Levitt, and by Eifert, Forsyth, & Craske

Branstetter, A., Wilson, K. G., & Mutch, D. G. (August 2003). ACT and the treatment of psychological distress among cancer patients. Paper given at the World Conference on ACT, RFT, and the New Behavioral Psychology, Linköping, Sweden. Large randomized trial showing that ACT is more helpful than traditional CBT in dealing with end stage cancer and works through a different process. Under revie

Randomized trial underway on ACT for command hallucinations in Australia. Under the direction of Fran Shawyer at the Mental Health Research Institute of Victoria. email: fshawyer@mhri.edu.au

Julieann Pankey has found that the AAQ is highly correlated with complicated grieving.
Dosheen Cook has found that the AAQ-heath relationship is the same in Asian as in Caucasian populations

Meyer, B., & Chow, L. (2003, June). Preference for experiential/mindfulness versus rational/cognitive Therapy: The role of information processing styles and sociopolitical attitudes. Poster presented at the annual convention of the Society for Psychotherapy Research. Weimar, Germany. Found that ACT was preferred by liberals … conservative preferred CBT. You can get this manuscript from b.meyer@roehampton.ac.uk

Greco, Dew, & Blomquist have a small uncontrolled pilot-feasibility study currently underway examining the impact of ACT for adolescents with chronic abdominal pain, anxiety, and depression (current enrollment = 10 teens/parents).

Greco has examined willingness and experiential avoidance among children who experience chronic abdominal pain and persistent headaches. Unpublished as of yet. After controlling for gender, age, and pain frequency, duration, and severity, higher levels of acceptance predicted life quality (Beta = .38), and experiential avoidance/fusion predicted greater use of school medical services and school restrooms during class time (Betas = .24 and .23, respectively), lower quality of life (Beta = -.49), higher anxiety (Beta = .64), and lower teacher-rated academic competence (Beta = -.29).

Greco, Dew, & Baer have a manuscript underway that presents psychometric properties of the Willingness and Action Measure (WAM), Avoidance and Fusion Questionnaire (AFQ), and Child Acceptance and Mindfulness Measure (CAMM). Findings suggest that the WAM and CAMM correlate positively with positive functioning, whereas scores on the AFQ correlate positively with physical and emotional symptoms and school disability.

Greco & Russell (2004) evaluated the short-term effects of participating in a summer camp for diabetic youth and investigated the extent to which psychological acceptance moderated children’s response to camp. Psychological acceptance (using the WAM) moderated the relation between pre- and post-camp diabetes self-care behavior, with self-care ratings increasing most when psychological acceptance was high (Beta = .24, p < .05).

Laurie Greco is testing out ACT with eating disorders

Heather Murray, James Herbert, and Evan Forman have a group ACT vs group CBT RCT for Smoking Cessation underway

Laura Ely and Kelly Wilson have a small (n = 10) open trial with college students at risk for drop out. Showed improvements on grades and on many of the subscales of the LASSI (study skills inventory) such as time management and using study aids which were never directly addressed

Claire Keogh is working on an extension of the Masuda
study on defusion. So far the data are consistent with the original.

Claire Keogh, Hilary-Anne Healy have completed a study on the utility of a defusion statement ("I am having the thought that" when presented in the context of positively and negatively evaluated self-referential statements in an automated procedure. Good data

Anne Keogh is comparing acceptance and control as interventions with experimentally induced radiant heat pain. Data is looking good for acceptance. May be a gender diff

Andy Cochrane, is looking at acceptance and a behavioral approach task relevant to spider phobia. All interventions fully automated. No data yet.

Geraldine Scanlon is working with a sample of ADHD kids on self-esteem, trying to replicate the recent study of me-good and me-bad relations published in the Record by Rhonda and Kelly.

Claire Campbell is investigating the PASAT and mirror tracing procedures for stress tolerance and applying ACT interventions to them.

Fodhla Coogan and Loretto Cunningham are looking at experimental analogues of experiential avoidance in the context of equivalence relations and aversive versus positive pictures.

Kevin Vowles and John Sorrell have been piloting a group treatment for chronic pain patients integrating the traditional educational stuff that is often part of psychological treatments for pain (e.g., meds, exercise, nutrition, sleep, communication) with ACT. The treatment consists of eight 90-minute sessions. Data so far look good

Frank Gardner at La Salle has a study being written up that shows that
1. Individuals who score high on measures of anger (STAXI) also score high on experiential avoidance and low on emotion regulation.
2. Individuals who score high on anger AND demonstrate behavioral dysregulation are likely to have a significant aversiove early life history (across multiple domains) unlike those patients with behavior dysregulation with minimal anger. These same patients score much lower on QOLI and a values assessment that we have bveen using as well.-
3. The AAQ predicts early termination from treatment (explaining 51% of the variance)... when directly targeted with a a 10 minute "psychoeducation" about experiential avoidance premature termination (69% of which occurs between intake and session 1) is reduced by 50%.

Jason Luoma at University of Nevada, Reno is conducting a randomized trial comparison an introductory 2-day workshop on ACT to the same workshop plus six sessions of phone consultation on learning ACT.

Brandon Gaudiano is conducting a pilot study of a novel psychosocial treatment integrating behavioral activation and ACT for patients with Major Depressive Disorder, severe with psychotic features.

Jen Plumb and Steven Hayes examined the relationship between personal values and depression using the PVQ (Blackledge & Ciarrochi). Found that depressed individuals were more likely to report low success at living consistently with values across domains than non-depressed individuals, and the discrepancy between values success and importance was related more strongly to psychological functioning in depressed individuals than non-depressed individuals. When depressed individuals were low on success at living consistently with their values they were more likely to endorse pliant and avoidance based reasons for choosing those values than non-depressed controls.

Jen Plumb, Mike Levin and Steven Hayes are examining the potentially motivative effects of values statements on studying behavior in college students. Two studies are underway (data collection phase). One examines self-monitoring of study behavior versus a simple values intervention in addition to self-monitoring. The other examines the differential effects of aversive values motivation (e.g., pliant, avoidant functions) as opposed to appetitive values motivation (e.g., choice, awareness of the reinforcement from living consistent with values) on studying behavior.

JoAnne Dahl and students have RCTs underway in smoking, OCD, and obesity.

JoAnne Dahl has an RCT underway with headache and one with social phobia

Julie Wetherell at UCSD and the VA there (working with Niloo Afari, who recently joined their faculty) have a paper under review comparing ACT to CBT in 100 chronic pain patients.

Nancy Kocovski, Jan Fleming, & Neil Rector (U of Toronto) have an ACT protocol (they call it Mindfulness and Acceptance-Based Group Therapy) for social anxiety that is working well and is headed toward a randomized controlled trial

Tobias Lundgren has finished an ACT RCT for adolescents diagnosed with Aspergers syndrome. The study involved a 12 week treatment program with a 2 months follow up. Significant interaction effects were found on depression, anxiety and stress scales in favor of the treatment group. Furthermore, significant interaction effects were found on attention ability and teacher ratings on troublesome behavior as compared to a waiting list.

Study underway by Andrew Gloster and colleagues at the Institute of Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy in Dresden, Germany, grant funded by the German government entitled: What Should We Do When CBT for Panic/Agoraphobia Fails: ACT! The goal is to test whether ACT can help those patients who are categorized as non-responders following an intense course of CBT.

Studies underway at the School of Psychology, University of Wollongong

1) Billich, Ciarrochi, & Deane have completed a wait-list control trial of ACT with the NSW police. The research suggests that ACT improves mental health, at least in the short run. We are writing this up for publication (This is funded by the Australian Research Council)

2) Fisher and Ciarrochi are conducting a cross-sectional study on personal values and quality of life amongst clients with Cancer. We are examining whether people have better adjustment and mental health when they tend to hold values for authentic reasons (e.g., vitality) rather than controlled reasons (e.g., external pressure), and when they tend to succeed at authentically held values.

3) Ciarrochi and Bailey (in press) have developed a new measure that is designed to aid values clarification. The measure is called the Survey of Life Principles (SLP), and is currently being evaluated in a number of studies. Stefanic and Ciarrochi are examining the psychometric properties of the SLP. Frearson & Ciarrochi are evaluating it in the context of couples satisfaction. Bayliss and Ciarrochi are evaluating it in the context of the police force.

4) Bayliss and Ciarrochi have done a small longitudinal study amongst NSW police recruits, following them from police recruit (Time 1) to one year in the police force (Time 2). Mindfulness, low experiential avoidance, and emotion identification skill were significant predictors of mental health at Time 2, even after controlling for mental health at Time 1. We are in the process of writing this up. (This is funded by the Australian Research Council)

5) We are now in the seventh year of a large longitudinal study of adolescents (now aged 17). Supavadeeprasit and Ciarrochi are preparing a manuscript that looks at experiential avoidance (in grade 8) predicting future social and emotional well-being. Jordan & Ciarrochi have also been looking at the measurement of mindfulness amongst adolescents and its ability to predict future levels of social and emotional well-being (The longitudinal study is been funded by the Australian Research Council and the National Health and Medical Research Council).

6) Ciarrochi, Lane, & Blackledge have developed an internet-based ACT intervention for people diagnosed with cancer. We are in the process of evaluating its efficacy. (This has been funded by the NSW Cancer Council).

Judith Wetherell at UCSD has a trial on ACT for geriatric GAD

Gerhard Andersson has an RCT completed on ACT for tinnitus

Chris Watson and Christine Purdon at the University of Waterloo, Canada, compared cognitive defusion (using word repetition) to imaginal exposure and no intervention in reducing the believability, distress, and meaningfulness associated with contamination-related thoughts in individuals with high levels of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Significant reductions in belief, distress, and meaningfulness were observed following defusion but not the other two conditions. At follow up both defusion and exposure produced gains. The loss of verbal meaning in defusion was associated with reductions in appraisal ratings at follow-up.

There is an RCT for lupus being done by Tomás Quirosa and Olga Gutiérrez in Almeria

Annie Umbricht at Johns Hopkins has submitted a grant on ACT and Contingency Management for substance abuse


Jan Blalock has an NIH grant for an RCT on ACT for smoking (as of 2009)


Angie Stotts is nearing completion of her RCT of ACT to help with drug detoxification. Good effect sizes ... on the edge p value wise (ah the joys of low power)


Michelle Sheets, a Ph.D. student at Hofstra University, and Yulia Landa at Cornell Medical College has a trial on ACT for delusions underway at the New York Presbyterian Hospital. Contact: yul9003@med.cornell.edu


Rhonda Merwin posted on 5/21/2014:

My colleagues (Timko, Zucker) and I have completed an open trial of adolescent anorexia nervosa (N = 47) - there were nice outcomes - remission rates were similar to Family Based Treatment (Maudsley). The preliminary paper is out- the main paper will be out soon.

My colleagues (Bigatti et al.) and I have completed an small RCT (N = 28) comparing ACT to an educational control for fibromyalgia-- data supported some unique positive outcomes for ACT. Manuscript in progress.

 

Jean Fournier fournier@u-paris10.fr has several studies coming on ACT for high level athletes in France


Jane Morton, Sharon Snowden, and Michelle Gopold in Melbourne have an RCT on ACT for BPD … under review right now

Michele Craske at UCLA has a couple of large ACT vs. CBT projects with anxiety disorders. The first one, with Joanna Arch as senior author, is under submission. Similar outcomes ….different in a few subgroups; different moderators and mediators


Niloofar Afair at UC San Diego / VA has a VA grant for an RCT of ACT for binge eating


Niloo is also doing a pilot study of ACT for distress and treatment decision-making in early stage prostate cancer patients.


Julie Wetherell at UC San Diego has a VA grant to do a non-inferiority trial comparing ACT in person to ACT in telehealth for chronic pain.
 

Additional information about research being conducted in Australia and New Zealand can be found here.

Steven Hayes

Non-Empirical Readings

Non-Empirical Readings

The non-empirical literature on ACT / RFT (we are listing primarily ACT work here) is large. In order to make this list easy to update it is listed by year, but do note that this puts some of the important articles in the middle.

In Press

  • Wilson, K. G., & Sandoz, E. K. (in press). Mindfulness, values, and the therapeutic relationship in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy. In S. F. Hick & T. Bein (Eds.), Mindfulness and the therapeutic relationship. New York: Guilford Press.

2008

  • Blackledge, J. T., Moran, D. J., & Ellis, A. E. (2008). Bridging the divide: Linking basic science to applied psychotherapeutic interventions - A relational frame theory account of cognitive disputation in rational emotive behavior therapy. Journal of Rational-Emotive & Cognitive-Behavior Therapy.

2007

  • Blackledge, J. T. (2007). Disrupting verbal processes: Cognitive defusion in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and other Mindfulness-based Psychotherapies. The Psychological Record, 57(4).
  • Chowla, N., & Ostafin, B. (2007). Experiential avoidance as a functional dimensional approach to psychopathology: An empirical review. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 63(9), 871–890.
  • Hayes, S. C., & Plumb, J. C. (2007). Mindfulness from the Bottom Up: Providing an Inductive Framework for Understanding Mindfulness Processes and their Application to Human Suffering. Psychological Inquiry, 18(4), 242-248.
  • Pierson, H., & Hayes, S. C. (2007). Using Acceptance and Commitment Therapy to empower the therapeutic relationship. In in P. Gilbert & R. Leahy (Eds.), The Therapeutic Relationship in Cognitive Behavior Therapy (pp. 205-228). London: Routledge
  • Twohig, M. P., Moran, D. J., & Hayes, S. C. (2007). A functional contextual account of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. In D. Woods & J. Kanter (Eds.), Understanding Behavior Disorders. Reno, NV: Context Press.
  • Twohig, M. P., & Hayes, S. C. (2007). Implications of verbal processes for childhood disorders: Tourette’s disorder, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, and autism. In D. Woods & J. Kanter (Eds.), Understanding Behavior Disorders. Reno, NV: Context Press.

2006

  • Bond, F. W., Hayes, S. C., & Barnes-Holmes, D. ( 2006). Psychological Flexibility, ACT and Organizational Behavior. In S. C. Hayes, F. W. Bond, D. Barnes-Holmes, & J. Austin (Eds.), Acceptance and Mindfulness at Work: Applying Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and Relational Frame Theory to Organizational Behavior Management (pp. 25-54). Binghamton, NY: The Haworth Press.
  • Hayes, S. C. (2006). Language, self, and diversity. In J. C. Muran (Ed.), Dialogues on difference: Diversity studies of the therapeutic relationship. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
  • Roemer, L., Salters-Pedneault, K., & Orsillo, S. M. (2006). Incorporating mindfulness and acceptance-based strategies in the treatment of generalized anxiety disorder. In R. Baer (Ed.), Mindfulness-Based Treatment Approaches: Clinician's Guide to Evidence Base and Applications (pp 52-74). New York: Academic Press.
  • Shenk, C., Masuda, A., Bunting, K., & Hayes, S. C. (2006). The psychological processes underlying mindfulness: Exploring the link between Buddhism and modern contextual behavioral psychology. In D. K. Nauriyal (Ed.), Buddhist thought and applied psychology: Transcending the boundaries. London: Routledge-Curzon.
  • Walser, R. D., & Hayes, S. C. (2006). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and trauma survivors. In V. Follette (Ed.), Trauma in context: A cognitive behavioral approach to trauma, Second Ed. New York: Guilford Press.

2005

  • Bach, P. A., Gaudiano, B. A., Pankey, J., Herbert, J. D., & Hayes, S. C. (2005). Acceptance, mindfulness, values, and psychosis: Applying ACT to the chronically mentally ill. In R. Baer (Ed.), Mindfulness-based interventions: A clinician’s guide. San Diego: Elsevier.
  • Batten, S. V., Orsillo, S. M., & Walser, R. D. (2005). Acceptance and mindfulness-based approaches to the treatment of posttraumatic stress disorder. In S. M. Orsillo & L. Roemer (Eds.), Acceptance and mindfulness-based approaches to anxiety: Conceptualization and treatment. New York: Springer.
  • Ciarrochi, J., Robb, H., & Godsell, C. (2005). Letting a little nonverbal air into the room: Insights from Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: Part 1: Philosophical and theoretical underpinnings. Journal of Rational-Emotive & Cognitive-Behavior Therapy, 23, 79-106.
  • Ciarrochi, J., & Robb, H. (2005). Letting a little nonverbal air into the room: Insights from acceptance and commitment therapy: Part 2: Applications. Journal of Rational-Emotive & Cognitive Behavior Therapy, 23(2), 107-130.
  • Dahl, J., & Lundgren, T. (2005). Behavior Analysis of Epilepsy: Conditioning mechanisms, be-havior technology and the contribution of ACT. The Behavior Analyst Today, 6(3), 191-202.
  • Fletcher, L., & Hayes, S. C. (2005). Relational Frame Theory, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, and a functional analytic definition of mindfulness. Journal of Rational-Emotive and Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy, 23(4), 315-336.
  • Greco, L. A., Blackledge, J. T., Coyne, L. W., & Enreheich, J. (2005). Acceptance and mindfulness-based approaches for childhood anxiety disorders: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy as an Example. In S. M. Orsillo & L. Roemer (Eds.), Acceptance and Mindfulness-Based Approaches to Anxiety: Conceptualization and Treatment. New York: Kluwer/Plenum.
  • Hayes, S. C. (2005). Stability and change in Cognitive Behavior Therapy: Considering the implications of ACT and RFT. Journal of Rational-Emotive & Cognitive-Behavior Therapy, 23(2), 131-151.
  • Orsillo, S. M., Roemer, L., & Holowka, D. (2005). Acceptance-based behavioral therapies for for anxiety: Using acceptance and mindfulness to enhance traditional cognitive-behavioral approaches. In S. M. Orsillo & L. Roemer (Eds.), Acceptance- and mindfulness-based approaches to anxiety: Conceptualization and treatment. New York: Springer
  • Twohig, M. P., Masuda, A., Varra, A. A., & Hayes, S. C. (2005). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy as a treatment for anxiety disorders. In S. M. Orsillo & L. Roemer (Eds.), Acceptance and mindfulness-based approaches to anxiety: Conceptualization and treatment (pp. 101-130). New York: Kluwer/Springer-Verlag.
  • Twohig, M., Pierson, H. M., & Hayes, S. C. (2005). Homework in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy. Chapter to appear in Kazantzis, N. & L'Abate, L. (Eds.), Handbook of homework assignments in psychotherapy: Research, practice, and prevention. New York: Springer.
  • Zettle, R. D. (2005). The evolution of a contextual approach to therapy: From Comprehensive Distancing to ACT. International Journal of Behavioral and Consultation Therapy, 1, 77-89.

2004

  • Blackledge, J. T. (2004). Functional Contextual Processes in Posttraumatic Stress. International Journal of Psychology and Psychological Therapy, 4(3), 443-467.
  • Coyne, L. W., & Wilson, K. G. (2004). The role of cognitive fusion in impaired parenting: An RFT analysis. International Journal of Psychology and Psychological Therapy, 4, 469-486.
  • Hayes, S. C. (2004). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and the new behavior therapies: Mindfulness, acceptance and relationship. In S. C. Hayes, V. M. Follette, & M. Linehan (Eds.), Mindfulness and acceptance: Expanding the cognitive behavioral tradition (pp. 1-29). New York: Guilford.
  • Hayes, S. C. (2004). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, Relational Frame Theory, and the third wave of behavior therapy. Behavior Therapy, 35, 639-665.
    Makes the case that ACT is part of a larger shift in the behavioral and cognitive therapies toward more contextual approaches
  • Wilson, K. G. & Murrell, A. R. (2004). Values work in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: Setting a Course for Behavioral Treatment. In Hayes, S. C., Follette, V. M., & Linehan, M. (Eds.) Mindfulness & Acceptance: Expanding the cognitive-behavioral tradition (pp. 120-151). New York: Guilford Press.

2003

  • Baer, R. A. (2003). Mindfulness training as a clinical intervention: a conceptual and empirical review. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice, (10)2, 125-143.
  • Hayes, S. C., Masuda, A., & De Mey, H. (2003). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and the third wave of behavior therapy (Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: een derde-generatie gedragstherapie). Gedragstherapie (Dutch Journal of Behavior Therapy), 2, 69-96.
  • Hayes, S. C., & Pankey, J. (2003). Psychological acceptance. In W. O'Donohue, J. Fisher, & S. C. Hayes (Eds.), Cognitive-behavior therapy: Applying empirically supported techniques in your practice (pp. 4-9). New York: Wiley.

2002

  • Bond, F. & Hayes, S. C. (2002). ACT at work. In F. Bond & W. Dryden (Eds.), Handbook of Brief Cognitive Behaviour Therapy. Chichester, England: Wiley.
    This chapter has a fairly complete treatment manual for the treatment of stress in the workplace using ACT. It was the manual for the study above.
  • Hayes, S. C., (2002). Buddhism and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 9, 58-66.
  • Hayes, S. C. (2002). Acceptance, mindfulness, and science. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice, 9 (1), 101-106.
  • Hayes, S. C., & Pankey, J. (2002). Experiential Avoidance, Cognitive Fusion, and an ACT Approach to Anorexia Nervosa. Response: ACT Approach to Anorexia. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 9, 243-247.
  • Zettle, R. D. & Hayes, S. C. (2002). Brief ACT treatment of depression. In F. Bond & W. Dryden (Eds.), Handbook of Brief Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (pp. 35-54). Chichester, England: Wiley.

2001

  • Follette, V. M., & Batten, S. V. (2000). The role of emotion in psychotherapy supervision: A contextual behavioral analysis. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 7(3), 306-312.
    Describes a contextual approach to psychotherapy supervision, using a model derived from Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and Functional Analytic Psychotherapy.
  • Follette, W. C. and Hayes, S. C. (2000). Contemporary behavior therapy. In C. R. Snyder and R. Ingram (Eds.), The handbook of psychological change (pp. 381-408). New York: Wiley.
  • Hayes, S. C. (2000). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy in the treatment of experiential avoidance disorders. Clinician’s Research Digest (Supplemental Bulletin 22, June, 1-2).
  • Hayes, S. C. & Bissett, R. T. (2000). Behavioral psychotherapy and the rise of clinical behavior analysis. In J. A. Austin & J. E. Carr (Eds.), Handbook of applied behavior analysis (pp. 231-245). Reno: Context Press.
  • Hayes, S. C. & Gregg, J. (2000). Functional contextualism and the self. In C. Muran (Ed.), Self-relations in the psychotherapy process (pp. 291-307). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
    Deals with the self issue.
  • Luciano, C. & Hayes, S. C. (2001). Treating experiential avoidance. International Journal of Clinical and Health Psychology, 1, 109-157.

2000

1999

  • Hayes, S. C., Wilson, K. G., & Gifford, E.V. (1999). Consciousness and private events. In B. Thyer (Ed.), The philosophical legacy of behaviorism (pp. 153-187). Lancaster, UK: Kluwer.
  • Wilson, K. G. & Blackledge, J. T. (1999). Recent Developments in the Behavioral Analysis of Language: Making Sense of Clinical Phenomena. In M. J. Dougher (Ed.), Clinical behavior analysis. Reno, NV: Context Press.

1998

  • Gifford, E. V. & Hayes, S. C. (1998). Functional contextualism: A pragmatic philosophy for behavioral science. In W. O’Donohue & R. Kitchener (Eds.), Handbook of behaviorism (pp. 285-327). New York: Academic Press.
  • Hayes, S. C., Gregg J., Wulfert, E. (1998). Akzeptanz- und commitment- therapie: ein radikal behavioraler ansatz. In Sulz, Serge K. D. (Ed.), Kurz psychotherapien: Wege in die zunkunft der psychotherapie. (pp.145-162) CIP-Medien: München, Germany.
  • Walser, R. D. & Hayes, S. C. (1998). Acceptance and trauma survivors: Applied issues and problems. In V. Follette, J. Ruzak, & F. Abueg (Eds.), Trauma in context: A cognitive behavioral approach to trauma (pp. 256-277). New York: Guilford Press.

1997

  • Hayes, S. C., & Ju, W. (1997). The applied implications of rule-governed behavior. Chapter in W. O’Donohue (Ed.), Learning and behavior therapy (pp. 374-391). New York: Allyn & Bacon.
  • Robinson, P. & Hayes, S. C. (1997). Acceptance and commitment: A model for integration. In N. A. Cummings, J. L. Cummings, & J. N. Johnson. (Eds.), Behavioral health in primary care: A guide for clinical integration (pp. 177-203). Madison, CT: Psychosocial Press.

1996

1995

  • Hayes, S. C., & Wilson, K. G. (1995). The role of cognition in complex human behavior: A contextualistic perspective. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry, 26, 241-248.

1994

  • Hayes, S. C. (1994). Content, context, and the types of psychological acceptance. Chapter in Hayes, S. C., Jacobson, N. S., Follette, V. M. & Dougher, M. J. (Eds.), Acceptance and change: Content and context in psychotherapy (pp. 13-32). Reno, NV: Context Press.
  • Hayes, S. C. & Wilson, K.G. (1994). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: Altering the verbal support for experiential avoidance. The Behavior Analyst, 17, 289-303.
    An entry into ACT and its implications … but the ACT book is now better.

1993

  • Hayes, S. C. (1993). Rule governance: basic behavioral research and applied implications. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 2, 193-197.
  • Hayes, S. C., & Wilson, K. G. (1993). Some applied implications of a contemporary behavior-analytic account of verbal events. The Behavior Analyst, 16, 283-301. An entry into RFT and its implications … but the RFT book is now better.

1992

  • Hayes, S. C. (1992). Verbal relations, time, and suicide. In S. C. Hayes & L. J. Hayes (Eds.), Understanding verbal relations (pp. 109-118). Reno, NV: Context Press.
    More basic but another early paper putting together RFT and the theory of psychopathology that underlies ACT

1990 and earlier

  • Hayes, S. C., Kohlenberg, B. S. & Melancon, S. M. (1989). Avoiding and altering rule-control as a strategy of clinical intervention. In S. C. Hayes (Ed.), Rule governed behavior: Cognition, contingencies, and instructional control. (pp. 359-385). New York: Plenum.
    The first paper to try to put together RFT and ACT
  • Hayes, S. C. & Melancon, S. M. (1989). Comprehensive distancing, paradox, and the treatment of emotional avoidance. In M. Ascher (Ed.), Paradoxical procedures in psychotherapy (pp. 184-218). New York: Guilford.
    An early ACT chapter
  • Hayes, S. C. (1987). A contextual approach to therapeutic change. In N. Jacobson (Ed.), Psychotherapists in clinical practice: Cognitive and behavioral perspectives (pp. 327-387). New York: Guilford.
    The first full-length presentation of the ACT model (then known as "Comprehensive Distancing"
  • Hayes, S. C. (1984). Making sense of spirituality. Behaviorism, 12, 99-110.
    Sometimes it helps to see beginnings to understand what happens later. This odd little paper does that. It is a mix of philosophical moves and interests that is clearly on the way to ACT, RFT, deictic frames, a transcendent sense of self, defusion, mindfulness, contextual use of language, and other issues that are much clearer now. If you like the history of ideas and like ACT / RFT, this is a fun read.
  • Zettle, R. D., & Hayes, S. C. (1982). Rule governed behavior: A potential theoretical framework for cognitive behavior therapy. In P. C. Kendall (Ed.), Advances in cognitive behavioral research and therapy (pp. 73-118). New York: Academic.
Steven Hayes

ACT Handouts (2006 - 2014)

ACT Handouts (2006 - 2014)

The ACT Handouts that were released annually from 2006 - 2014.  The ACT Handout contains several sections:

  • How to Learn ACT
  • The Values of the ACT / RFT Community
  • Theoretical Articles, Review Articles, and Empirical Studies
  • Books, Tapes, and DVDs
  • Quick and Dirty ACT Analysis of Psychological Problems
  • ACT Therapeutic Posture and ACT Therapeutic Steps
  • An ACT Case Formulation Framework
  • Measures (AAQ-1, AAQ-II, and ACT ADVISOR Psychological Flexibility Measure)
  • Core ACT Competencies
  • Examples of ACT Components

2014 ACT handout

2013 ACT handout

2012 ACT handout

2011 ACT handout

2008 ACT handout

2006 ACT handout

Community

ACT Handout: A Summary of ACT and Most ACT studies (2013)

ACT Handout: A Summary of ACT and Most ACT studies (2013)

The file at the bottom of the page (the ACT handout) lists most ACT publications out or in press as of Winter 2013. It also list all of the ongoing major research projects we know about.

Steven Hayes

Is Psychological Flexibility and different than self-esteem, neuroticism, etc

Is Psychological Flexibility and different than self-esteem, neuroticism, etc

The following was an elegant answer on the ACT list serve to a question in September 2016 about why psychological flexibility is an different than scores of similar concepts.

I think Frank nailed it

- S

Steven C. Hayes

 

The question of ‘how is psychological flexibility different from___?’ is a common and understandable one. Indeed, parsimony holds that we should not idly create new psychological constructs in our spare time, in order to further our studies or careers (but perhaps this is where I’ve gone wrong). That said, psychological flexibility (PF) is not new: it has been discussed in mainstream publications for 20 years and in more specialised ones before that; indeed, the term ‘acceptance’ has been the ‘A’ in ACT for nearly 28-30 years. On a scientific note, it is, of course, an empirical question as to whether or not PF predicts outcomes of interest (e.g., well-being, depression, productivity) better than an older construct that ‘seems like’ PF. Showing that it does is useful and worth investigating. Moreover, showing that PF predicts an outcome, whilst controlling for another similar variable is even more interesting, so I would suggest doing that in your work. Perhaps most importantly, in some regards, I think that it is useful to recall that contextual behavioural science seeks to identify variables that one can predict and influence. We know through a sufficient number of outcome studies that we can influence PF: this is why we measure it; this is why we use it in methodologies and analyse it with inferential statistics that individual difference enthusiasts normally claim as their methods of expertise. We do not really know how to use a small set of techniques to enhance self-esteem, self-efficacy, resilience, or reduce neuroticism. All of these variables may predict important outcomes, but, as far as I know, we cannot point to full-scale interventions, never mind a few techniques, that can reliably change them; and, even if we could, we have insufficient evidence that they actually mediate change in a psychological intervention. With PF, however, we have such evidence: this is why we wish to study it, because we can improve it. I have found that pointing this out (respectfully, of course) is useful.

Professor Frank W. Bond, PhD
Director, Institute of Management Studies
Goldsmiths, University of London

Steven Hayes

ACT Component/Micro Study Information

ACT Component/Micro Study Information

A number of studies have been conducted examining the impact of small, ACT-based interventions in lab-based settings. This page includes a list of studies with available intervention scripts or sections of articles that specifically state how the intervention was conducted. In addition, it includes scripts for studies that have not yet been completed in order to provide additional examples of the interventions that are being tested. These scripts can help inform the design of future component/micro studies as well as provide a resource for those reviewing these studies.

If there are any additional study intervention scripts that are not listed here, you can add it by creating a new page using the instructions below.

To Add Content
1. Log in to your ACBS member account (you cannot create content as a guest).
2. Find your way to this parent page.
3. Click [add child page] at bottom.
4. Provide a concise, descriptive title.
5. Either attach a text file or a link to the content.
6. Remember to click [save].

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How to Do ACT Laboratory-Based Component Studies

How to Do ACT Laboratory-Based Component Studies

This is a modified list of features that Dermot Barnes-Holmes presented at the first ACT Summer Institute in Reno in 2003. I (SCH) have added a few things as well A List of Features that ACT Laboratory-Based Component Studies and Experimental Analogs of ACT Processes Should Contain Here is a list of features that we consider to be essential for conducting top quality experimental research that is designed to model and test ACT processes in laboratory component research. There are almost certainly others and the relative emphasis that is placed on each one will vary as a function of the research question and overall design of the study.

In general remember that the purpose of laboratory-based component research is primarily theoretical, so be very clear about the ideas you are testing. If you want to see if these ideas make a practical, clinical difference, that requires clinical research. But it is better to test the clinical implications of theoretical ideas that work, so laboratory-based component research is very important as part of a broader research strategy.

Here are the design features to consider:

1. The experimenter should be blind to the intervention applied to each participant (or the procedure automated; see below).

2. The experimental conditions must balance as much as possible for all relevant attribute variables (e.g., gender, psychopathology, unless the attribute(s) is the target of the analysis).

3. The experimenter should not be personally familiar with the participants and if they are, familiarity should be balanced across conditions.

4. The different interventions should be balanced in all possible ways, except for the critical difference you are seeking to manipulate (e.g., they should be the same length; they require similar levels of engagement with the material; if exercises are used that are appropriate for both conditions, they should be used in both; working should be matched where possible; method of delivery should be identical; etc).

5. The interventions should connect directly to the experimental challenge. In a pain tolerance study, for example, each of the interventions should focus on pain not anxiety or anger etc. (unless different foci are the target of the study).

6. Points 4 and 5 should be checked and supported by independent raters.

7. Where possible and appropriate, the procedure should involve requiring participants to articulate in their own words the intervention strategy that is being provided. Ideally this should be done at regular points throughout the intervention.

8. The verbal material produced under point 7 should be checked by independent raters to determine that participant “understanding” did not differ significantly across conditions, and to ensure that the manipulation successfully altered the intended behavioral process.

9. Participants should be reminded briefly of the relevant intervention strategy before the presentation of each physical or psychological challenge (e.g., CO2 inhalation, electric shock delivery, emotionally aversive pictures or video clips, spider BAT, etc).

10. Ideally, the entire procedure, including pre-intervention baseline, intervention, and post-intervention tasks should be automated. For example, the intervention could be presented via audio or video clips and these can then be checked by independent raters. Moreover, others can then take your automated procedure and attempt to replicate in a different lab. If automation is not possible, then every session should be videotaped to check for fidelity. If only some sessions are videotaped, then the experimenter should not know which ones are being taped.

11. All participants should be asked to summarize at the very end of the experiment the strategy they employed during the study so that these can be checked by independent raters.

12. Other questions of relevance should also be asked that might alter the interpretation of results. For example the participant might be asked to rate the likability or believability of the experimenter (including any video- or audio-based material), expectations for performance on the task, relevance of intervention to "real life", etc.

13. Ideally, some form of standardized self-report or other instrument should be developed to measure the extent to which participants understand and apply specific strategies.

14. For ACT / RFT studies the design of the protocols should be tied clearly to RFT concepts. Studies should not just grab a metaphor or exercise without working through how the metaphor/exercise is predicted, theoretically, to influence the participants’ responses in your study.

15. If the study is a group design it should be adequately powered to test the key hypotheses, especially if null results are to be meaningful. For example, if an interaction is possible, each individual cell size must have a large enough N to test that interaction at an adequate level (say, power of .8 assuming a sensible effect size)

16. If mediational analyses are important, the study must be powered to test these analyses. 17. Especially if null results are predicted, make sure the actual measurement characteristics, outliers, and similar issues do not undermine the calculated power.

18. Meta-analyses of ACT micro-component studies show that in general, rationale-alone interventions are weak (and without the controls specified above they are often difficult to interpret because it is not known what participants actually did in response to the rationale). If the purpose is to examine ACT components, consider including more active and experiential elements.

19. If testing multiple ACT components, consider how to assess for changes in multiple ACT processes and whether comparison conditions should tease apart the impact of individual components.

Steven Hayes

Example Component Study Files

Example Component Study Files

Attached you will find a series of components (e.g., video, visual basic programs, instructions, etc.) used in ACT micro studies examining the role of values in performance during a cold-pressor pain tolerance task. The study from which these components come is not yet published but many similar studies have used these components in the Barnes-Holmes laboratory at NUI-Maynooth. We hope that they will prove useful to you in developing your own studies. They have been uploaded to the site as compressed zip files but they should be able to be opened easily as their individual files once downloaded.

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(unpublished) Self as Context Intervention for Task Persistence

(unpublished) Self as Context Intervention for Task Persistence

We are in the process of testing the effects of a self-as-context intervention on two measures of task persistence (breath holding and a difficult math task). We used an active control condition involving the same metaphor and exercise, but emphasizing self-as-content and emotion control strategies throughout. The results of the intervention will be analyzed soon and included on this page.

We would really appreciate any feedback regarding the intervention scripts. If you have any comments or suggestions please contact Mike Levin at levinm2@gmail.com.

Data to be presented at
Levin, M., Waltz, T.J., Yadavaia, J.E. & Hayes, S.C. (2008). Examining the effect of a self as context intervention on multiple measures of task persistence. Paper presented at the 34th Annual Convention of the Association for Behavior Analysis International, Chicago, IL.

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(unpublished) Values Intervention for Study Behavior

(unpublished) Values Intervention for Study Behavior
We are currently testing the effects of a brief values intervention on study behavior with college students. The intervention includes a week of self monitoring and is being compared to self monitoring alone without the values intervention. The study is being conducted by Jennifer Plumb, Michael Levin, Kate Morrison and Steven Hayes. The values condition protocol script is included below. We would really appreciate any feedback regarding the intervention scripts. If you have any comments or suggestions please contact Jen Plumb at jcplumb@gmail.com.
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Campbell-Sills et al., 2006

Campbell-Sills et al., 2006

 Campell-Sills, L., Barlow, B.H., Brown, T.A. & Hofmann, S.G. (2006). Effects of suppression and acceptance on emotional responses of individuals with anxiety and mood disorders. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 44, 1251-1263.

Abstract

The present investigation compared the subjective and physiological effects of emotional suppression and acceptance in a sample of individuals with anxiety and mood disorders. Sixty participants diagnosed with anxiety and mood disorders were randomly assigned to one of two groups. One group listened to a rationale for suppressing emotions, and the other group listened to a rationale for accepting emotions. Participants then watched an emotion-provoking film and applied the instructions. Subjective distress, heart rate, skin conductance level, and respiratory sinus arrhythmia were measured before, during, and after the film. Although both groups reported similar levels of subjective distress during the film, the acceptance group displayed less negative affect during the post-film recovery period. Furthermore, the suppression group showed increased heart rate and the acceptance group decreased heart rate in response to the film. There were no differences between the two groups in skin conductance or respiratory sinus arrhythmia. These findings are discussed in the context of the existing body of research on emotion regulation and current treatment approaches for anxiety and mood disorders.

Protocol included below

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Eifert & Heffner, 2003

Eifert & Heffner, 2003

Eifert, G. H. & Heffner, M. (2003). The effects of acceptance versus control contexts on avoidance of panic-related symptoms. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry, 34, 293-312.

Abstract

The present study compared the effects of creating an acceptance versus a control treatment context on the avoidance of aversive interoceptive stimulation. Sixty high anxiety sensitive females were exposed to two 10-min periods of 10% carbon dioxide enriched air, an anxiogenic stimulus. Before each inhalation period, participants underwent a training procedure aimed at encouraging them either to mindfully observe (acceptance context) or to control symptoms via diaphragmatic breathing (control context). A third group was given no particular training or instructions. We hypothesized that an acceptance rather than control context would be more useful in the reduction of anxious avoidance. Compared to control context and no-instruction participants, acceptance context participants were less avoidant behaviorally and reported less intense fear and cognitive symptoms and fewer catastrophic thoughts during the CO2 inhalations. We discuss the implications of our findings for an acceptance-focused vs. control-focused context when conducting clinical interventions for panic and other anxiety disorders.

The intervention protocol is included below quoted from Heffner (2000).

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Feldner et al., 2003

Feldner et al., 2003

Feldner, M. T., Zvolensky, M. J., Eifert, G. H., & Spira, A. P. (2003). Emotional avoidance: An experimental tests of individual differences and response suppression during biological challenge. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 41, 403-411.

Abstract

The present study examined the affective consequences of response inhibition during a state of anxietyrelated physical stress. Forty-eight non-clinical participants were selected on the basis of pre-experimental differences in emotional avoidance (high versus low) and subjected to four inhalations of 20% carbon dioxide-enriched air. Half of the participants were instructed to inhibit the challenge-induced aversive emotional state, whereas the other half was instructed to simply observe their emotional response. Participants high in emotional avoidance compared to those low in emotional avoidance responded with greater levels of anxiety and affective distress but not physiological arousal. Individuals high in emotional avoidance also reported greater levels of anxiety relative to the low emotional avoidance group when suppressing compared to observing bodily sensations. These findings are discussed in terms of the significance of emotional avoidance processes during physical stress, with implications for better understanding the nature of panic disorder.

The intervention protocol is included below quoted from Feldner (2003).

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Forman et al., 2007

Forman et al., 2007

Forman, E.M., Hoffman, K.L., McGrath, K.B., Herbert, J.D., Brandsma, L.L. & Lowe, M.R. (2007). A comparison of acceptance- and control-based strategies for coping with food cravings: An analog study. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 45, 2372-2386.

Abstract

The present study utilized an analog paradigm to investigate the effectiveness of two strategies for coping with food cravings, which was theorized to be critical to the maintenance of weight loss. Ninety-eight undergraduate students were given transparent boxes of chocolate Hershey’s Kisses and instructed to keep the chocolates with them, but not to eat them, for 48 h. Before receiving the Kisses, participants were randomized to receive either (a) no intervention, (b) instruction in control-based coping strategies such as distraction and cognitive restructuring, or (c) instruction in acceptance-based strategies such as experiential acceptance and defusion techniques. Measures included the Power of Food Scale (PFS; a measure of psychological sensitivity to the food environment), self-report ratings of chocolate cravings and surreptitiously recorded chocolate consumption. Results suggested that the effect of the intervention depended on baseline PFS levels, such that acceptance-based strategies were associated with better outcomes (cravings, consumption) among those reporting the highest susceptibility to the presence of food, but greater cravings among those who scored lowest on the PFS. It was observed that craving self-report measures predicted chocolate consumption, and baseline PFS levels predicted both cravings and consumption. Results are discussed in terms of the implications for weight loss maintenance strategies.

Protocol included below

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Gutierrez et al., 2004

Gutierrez et al., 2004

Gutierrez, O., Luciano, M. C., Rodríguez. M., & Fink. B. (2004). Comparison between an Acceptance-based and a Cognitive-Control-Based Protocol for coping with pain. Behavior Therapy, 35, 767-783.

Abstract

This study compares specific acceptance-based strategies and cognitive-control-based strategies for coping with experimentally induced pain. Forty participants were randomly assigned to an acceptance-based protocol (ACT), the goal of which was to disconnect pain-related thoughts and feelings from literal actions, or to a control-based protocol (CONT) that focused on changing or controlling pain-related thoughts and feelings. Participants took part in a nonsense-syllables-matching task that involved successive exposures to increasingly painful shocks. In both conditions, the task involved an overall value-oriented context that encouraged the participants to continue with the task despite the exposure to pain. At times throughout the task, participants were asked to choose to continue with the task and be shocked or stop the task and avoid being shocked. Each choice had specific costs and benefits. Participants performed the task twice, both before and after receiving the assigned experimental protocol. Two measures were obtained at pre- and post-intervention: tolerance of the shocks and self-reports of pain. ACT participants showed significantly higher tolerance to pain and lower believability of experienced pain compared to the CONT condition. Conceptual and clinical implications are discussed.

Protocol included below

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Keogh et al., 2005

Keogh et al., 2005

Keogh, E., Bond, F. W., Hanmer, R. & Tilston, J. (2005). Comparing acceptance and control-based coping instructions on the cold-pressor pain experiences of healthy men and women. European Journal of Pain, 9, 591-598.

Abstract

The current study reflects recent developments in psychotherapy by examining the effect of acceptance-based coping instructions, when compared to the opposite, more control/distraction-based instructions, on cold-pressor pain. Since previous research indicates gender differences in how people cope with pain, we also sought to determine whether differences would be found between healthy men and women. As predicted, results indicated that women reported lower pain threshold and tolerance level than did men. Furthermore, the acceptance-based instruction resulted in lower sensory pain reports when compared to the opposite instructions. Finally, for affective pain, acceptance instructions only benefited women. These results suggest that acceptance-based coping may be particular useful in moderating the way in which individuals, especially women, cope with pain.

The intervention protocol is included below quoted from Keogh et al. (2005).

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Levitt et al., 2004

Levitt et al., 2004

Levitt, J. T., Brown, T. A., Orsillo, S. M., & Barlow, D. H. (2004). The effects of acceptance versus suppression of emotion on subjective and psychophysiological response to carbon dioxide challenge in patients with panic disorder. Behavior Therapy, 35, 747-766.

Abstract

The effects of acceptance versus suppression of emotion were examined in 60 patients with panic disorder. Prior to undergoing a 15-minute 5.5% carbon dioxide challenge, participants were randomly assigned to 1 of 3 conditions: a 10-minute audiotape describing 1 of 2 emotion-regulation strategies (acceptance or suppression) or a neutral narrative (control group). The acceptance group was significantly less anxious and less avoidant than the suppression or control groups in terms of subjective anxiety and willingness to participate in a second challenge, but not in terms of self-report panic symptoms or physiological measures. No differences were found between suppression and control groups on any measures. Use of suppression was related to more subjective anxiety during the challenge, and use of acceptance was related to more willingness to participate in a second challenge. The results suggest that acceptance may be a useful intervention for reducing subjective anxiety and avoidance in patients with panic disorder.

Protocol included below

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Masedo & Esteve, 2007

Masedo & Esteve, 2007

Masedo, A.I. & Esteve, M.R. (2007). Effects of suppression, acceptance and spontaneous coping on pain tolerance, pain intensity and distress. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 45, 199-209.

Abstract
Wegner’s Theory of Ironic Processes has been applied to study the effects of cognitive strategies to control pain. Research suggests that suppression contributes to a more distressing pain experience. Recently, the acceptance-based approach has been proposed as an alternative to cognitive control. This study assessed the tolerance time, the distress and the perceived pain intensity in three groups (suppression, acceptance and spontaneous coping groups) when the participants were exposed to a cold pressor procedure. Two hundred and nineteen undergraduates volunteered to participate. The suppression group showed the shortest tolerance time and the acceptance group showed the longest tolerance time. The acceptance group showed pain and distress immersion ratings that were significantly lower than in the other two groups, between which the differences were not significant. In the first recovery period, the suppression group showed pain and distress ratings that were higher than in the other two groups. In the second recovery period, although the acceptance group showed pain and distress ratings that were significantly lower than in the other two groups, the suppression and the spontaneous coping groups did not differ. The presence of a ‘rebound’ of physical discomfort and the effects of suppression on behavioural avoidance are discussed. These results support the acceptance approach in the management of pain.

The full intervention protocol is included below in Spanish as well as a quoted section from the article describing the intervention in English.

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Páez-Blarrina et al., 2008

Páez-Blarrina et al., 2008

Páez-Blarrina M., Luciano C., Gutiérrez-Martínez O, Valdivia S., Ortega J. and Rodríguez-Valverde M. (2008). The role of values with personal examples in altering the functions of pain: Comparison between acceptance-based and cognitive-control-based protocols. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 46 , 84-97.

Abstract

The purpose of the present study was twofold. First, to compare the effect of establishing a motivational context of values on pain tolerance, believability, and reported pain, with three experimental conditions: pain acceptance (ACT condition), pain control (CONT condition), or no values (untrained condition). Second, the study aimed to isolate the impact of adding the corresponding coping strategies to both the ACT and the CONT conditions. Thirty adults were randomly assigned to one of the three experimental conditions. The participants went through the pain task in two occasions (Test I and Test II). In Test I, the effects of the ACT-values protocol (which established pain as part of valued action), the CONT-values protocol (which established high pain as opposed to valued action), and the no-values protocol, were compared. In Test II, the effect of adding the corresponding coping strategy to each condition (defusion for ACT vs. suppression for CONT) was examined. Test I showed a clear superiority of the ACT-values protocol in increasing tolerance and lowering pain believability. In Test II, the superiority of the ACT protocol was replicated, while the CONT protocol proved useful to reduce reported pain, in accordance with previous studies.

Protocol included below

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Roche et al., 2007

Roche et al., 2007

Roche, B., Forsyth, J.P. & Maher, E. (2007). The impact of demand characteristics on brief acceptance- and control-based interventions for pain tolerance. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 14, 381-393.

Abstract

The present analog study compared the effectiveness of an acceptance- and control-based intervention on pain tolerance using a cold pressor task, and is a partial replication and extension of the Hayes, Bissett et al. (Hayes, S. C., Bissett, R.T., Korn, Z., Zettle, R. D., Rosenfarb, I. S., Cooper, L. D., & Grundt, A. M. (1999). The impact of acceptance versus control rationales on pain tolerance. The Psychological Record, 49, 33-47) study. Our aim was to test the effects of a nonspecific source of therapeutic change within the context of ACT therapy. Otherwise healthy undergraduates (N=20) were exposed to a cold pressor task before, immediately after, and 10 min following one of the two interventions. Half of the participants also were assigned to a high demand characteristic condition in which the experimenter maintained close physical proximity, eye contact, and placed subtle social pressure on participants to please the experimenter. The results showed that the most important factor influencing latency to withstand the cold pressor task was social pressure. The acceptance-based intervention was more subject to demand than the control strategy. Evaluative ratings of pain were unaffected by the demand manipulation. The current data suggest that demand characteristics can exert a significant positive impact on the outcome of therapeutic protocols. The implications of this view for acceptance- and control-based psychosocial interventions are discussed.

Intervention script quoted from article below

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Vowles et al., 2007

Vowles et al., 2007

Vowles, K., McNeil, D.W., Bates, M., Gallimore, P. & McCall, C. (2007). Effects of pain acceptance and pain control strategies on physical impairment in individuals with chronic low back pain. Behavior Therapy, 38, 412-425.

Abstract 

Psychosocial treatments for chronic pain are effective. There is a need, however, to understand the processes involved in determining how these treatments contribute to behavior change. Control and acceptance strategies represent two potentially important processes involved in treatment, although they differ significantly in approach. Results from laboratory-based studies suggest that acceptance-oriented strategies significantly enhance pain tolerance and behavioral persistence, compared with control-oriented strategies. There is a need, however, to investigate processes of acceptance and control directly in clinical settings. The present study investigated the effects of three brief instructional sets (pain control, pain acceptance, continued practice) on demonstrated physical impairment in 74 individuals with chronic low back pain using an analogue experimental design. After controlling for baseline performance, the pain acceptance group demonstrated greater overall functioning on a set of 7 standardized physical tasks relative to the other two groups, which did not differ from one another. Further, the acceptance group exhibited a 16.3% improvement in impairment, whereas the pain control group worsened by 8.3% and the continued practice group improved by 2.5%. These results suggest that acceptance may be a key process involved in behavior change in individuals with chronic pain.

Protocol included below.

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Adherence & Competence

Adherence & Competence

In order to publish clinical trials at a high-level, it is advisable to conduct some sort of treatment adherence procedure. This will help you and your readers see how adherent your therapists or intervention deliverers were to the manuals provided (even if you used a flexible protocol, it can illuminate how well the important processes were delivered). It is also good to include a measure of therapist/intervention deliverer competence. In many of the ACT clinical trials, researchers have assessed both.

It is virtually impossible to conduct high-quality treatment adherence and competence coding without a coding manual that describes, accurately and with sufficient detail, the constructs of interest that most individuals with sufficient training could understand.

In assessing fidelity to a treatment model, such as ACT, these can be difficult questions to develop. Therefore, we recommend utilizing manuals that have already been tested in other clinical trials. Even if some of the questions pertain to areas you did not cover in your treatment (e.g., a different presenting problem), the format of the response options and the wording of the questions can still be very helpful as you modify some of the content you will assess.

Consistent with recommendations in the literature, we recommend the following:

  1. Select independent raters whenever possible, meaning the coders are not the same as those who administered the intervention.
  2. Wherever possible, raters should be blind to treatment condition.
  3. We recommend creating a training scenario much like any shaping procedure wherein raters watch/listen to recordings (this means that when designing your study, you should plan to audio or video record your sessions) together and talk through decision points for each item to be coded in the segment, then rate a segment selected for training, and assess the similarity of codes, and so on until sufficient reliability is reached.
  4. Inter-rater reliability should be assessed throughout the training period and discrepancies discussed with a trained master rater, the intervention developer, the adherence manual developer, or some combination of those.
  5. For calculating inter-rater reliability, search your local library for the latest statistics articles on this topic as conventions can change. In general, Kappas can be calculated for two raters assessing dichotomous ratings (e.g., YES or NO for the presence of a variable of interest such as diagnosis). Inter-class correlation coefficients (ICCs) are calculated for continuous variables -- such as a particular process occurring on a continuum -- and can accommodate more than two raters. Selecting the two-way mixed ICC (an option within SPSS) is preferred when the raters are not randomly selected from the population of all possible raters -- which is most often the case for clinical trials research.
  6. The training period should last until raters reach at least .80 reliability (a convention in the literature is that reliability of .80 and higher is sufficient).
  7. Finally, we recommend assessing the current convention in the literature regarding the number of sessions to code for adherence and competence. In several ACT studies to date, the convention is about 20% of each therapist's sessions over the course of the study.

Click on the child pages below for sample treatment adherence and competence materials that have been used in ACT studies.

There is a publication that provides detailed suggestions for conducting adherence ratings, as well as a published manual as a starting point:

Plumb, J. C. & Vilardaga, R. (2010). Assessing treatment integrity in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: Strategies and suggestions. International Journal of Behavioral Consultation and Therapy, 6, 263-295. 
Jen Plumb

ACT Fidelity Measure

ACT Fidelity Measure

Terrific folks at the University of Leeds have put together the ACT Fidelity Measure (ACT-FM).

 

About the ACT-FM

This measure is intended to be used by clinicians who are experienced in ACT and understand the principles of the approach. It can be used to rate clinician fidelity to ACT in a variety of contexts (e.g . as a tool to evaluate your own or another clinician’s practice, or as a research tool). The items capture four key areas within ACT: Therapist Stance, Open Response Style, Aware Response Style and Engaged Response Style. These are outlined below with definitions. There are items to score the therapist’s behaviours as consistent and inconsistent with these areas. For example, within the Open Response Style section, an ACT consistent item is ‘Therapist gives the client opportunities to notice how they interact with their thoughts and/or feelings (e.g . whether avoidant or open)’ and an ACT inconsistent item is ‘Therapist encourages the client to “think positive” or to substitute negative for positive thoughts as a treatment goal’. This is because it is possible to be both ACT consistent and inconsistent within the same therapy session, which may be useful to record for research or training purposes. The consistent and inconsistent items are not opposites of each other. If rating the inconsistent items is not relevant for your purposes, then please feel free to omit these items.
 

The full document is attached.

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ACT vs. PRT for OCD: Adherence Manuals

ACT vs. PRT for OCD: Adherence Manuals

Here are the adherence manuals used in the NIMH-funded randomized trial of ACT vs. PRT (Progressive Relaxation Training) for the treatment of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (Investigators: Michael Twohig & Steven Hayes). Twohig, M.P., Hayes, S.C., Plumb, J.C., Pruitt, L.D., Collins, A.B., Hazlett-Stevens, H., & Woidneck, M.R. (2010). A randomized clinical trial of acceptance and commitment therapy vs progressive relaxation training in the treatment of obsessive compulsive disorder. Manuscript under review. For questions about the use of the ACT manual, please contact Jen Plumb. For questions regarding the use of the PRT manual, please contact Holly Hazlett-Stevens at the University of Nevada Reno.

Jen Plumb

ACT with Bupropion Smoking Cessation Treatment Study: Adherence Manual

ACT with Bupropion Smoking Cessation Treatment Study: Adherence Manual

Below you will find the manual used in the NIDA-funded smoking cessation study conducted at the University of Nevada Reno. Please contact Heather Pierson for additional information about this manual. 

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Habit Reversal and ACT for Tic Disorders: Adherence Manual

Habit Reversal and ACT for Tic Disorders: Adherence Manual

This manual was adapted by Stephanie H. Best, MA from a line of adherence manuals used in various ACT and other studies.

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Prevention Trial: ACT Adherence Manual

Prevention Trial: ACT Adherence Manual

The manual below is being used in a NIMH-funded study to prevent mental health issues in college students. It was modified by Steve Hayes.

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Doing ACT Research

Doing ACT Research

For suggestions on doing ACT research, check out the attached talk Steve gave at the ACT SI II in Philadelphia, July 2005

Steven Hayes

Predictions

Predictions

Please add a child page describing any predictions you may have based on ACT theory. You should state the reasons for the prediction clearly.

By putting it on the page you are giving away the idea -- anyone is free to test it. However, we would ask if anyone does that, they ask the individual if they want to be acknowledged in the article that may result (not necesarily as an author, but perhaps in a footnote ... such as "The core ideas tested in this article was first suggested to us by Bessy Bluebottom, and we would like to thank her for the suggestion." Something like that.)

In the meantime, I've added a child page that simply dumps some predictions that have showed up on the website, just to get the thinking going.

Steven Hayes

A Whole Lotta Predictions

A Whole Lotta Predictions

Ok, I admit it. This is a bit of a mess.

I think there are perhaps hundreds of predictions that can be made from
ACT and RFT that are reasonably novel, and the ACT and RFT books contain
dozens of them. But they have never been all pulled together; and many new ones come up
every month.

Getting these in order is a project that is going to take a long time and a lot of people.
This process ont he website will have that in shape over time but in the meantime it seemed that a quick and dirty process would be worthwhile, so I challenged the list serves. This list, raw and unfiltered, is the result. Some of these ideas are great. Some seem off. And anyone was and is allowed to play. But it seemed more important to get people thinking than to get it right if "right" meant that some "leader" says "this is right."

If you have ideas, back up to the next highest level and add a child page and put yours out there!

- S

Steve Hayes

 

-------------

Things from Mike Twohig

These are the places where ACT will be different than BT, CT, or CBT
in the treatment of OCD or possibly other anxiety disorders (I am
more on top of the OCD data):

1. ACT based exposure will result in a greater ability to engage in
daily activities (or have a higher quality of live score)

2. Cognitions will be less believable (greater decreases in scores
on TAF scale) in ACT

3. ACT will be more acceptable (lower drop-outs, higher scores on
acceptability measures) than traditional BT / CBT methods

4. Clients will be more willing to confront feared stimuli in ACT

5. Therapists will rate administering the ACT intervention as more
acceptable

6. ACt will get better results at FU, but not necessarily at post

7. CT/ CBT will result in greater decreases in obsession at post,
but maybe not at FU (ACT will decrease obsessions at FU, but not
necessarily at post)

8. Outcomes on the ACT side will be mediated by changes in
willingness, defusion, and ability to act in a valued direction with obsessions

9. ACT will do particularly well with really difficult cases –
possibly even ERP failures

10. Avoidance of obsessions will better predict severity of OCD than
severity of obsessions (although greater avoidance should predict
greater intensity)

-------------

I'm not sure who did these. Could be me (Steve Hayes) ... sounds familiar

Challenging dysfunctional beliefs (Crel interventions) can at times increase their functional importance
(have a Cfunc effect)

You will be able to see the entangling impact of challenging dysfunctional beliefs
at the neurobiological level (e.g., laterization; more activation of verbal areas;
more stress hormones)

Cfunc manipulations will generally have a more positive impact than Crel interventions with
chronic psychological conditions

Crel interventions will have greatest impact in unfamiliar areas (e.g., clarifying values)
than in correcting familiar ones (e.g., struggles)

Measures of the ACT model (EA, fusion, inflexibility) will mediate the relationship between most forms existing of coping
and outcomes

You will see the effect of each of the elements of the ACT model (defusion, acceptance, values etc) at the
neruobiological level

You will get greater generalization across areas of struggle through ACT methods than
you will with traditional CT/CBT methods

ACT methods combined with traditional behavioral methods will be more effective generally than these behavioral methods alone

ACT will produce better effects with more severe and treatment resistant clients than will traditional CT/CBT methods; in
general that will not be true (or as true) with low intensity cases

------------------

Elaborating relevant verbal networks will reduce the believability of problematic thoughts (e.g., delusional beliefs/irrational beliefs) more than will disputing/challenging the thoughts. (Patty Bach)

----------------

'cognitive restructuring" will be demonstrated to work (when it does), via defusion and not belief/thought modification.

Frank Gardner

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in prospective studies (e.g. with adolescents), measures of EA and fusion (with negative OR POSITIVE beliefs about self) will predict onset mental health problems; similarly, measures of experience of self as context/transcendental self will predict resilience to upsetting life events.

janet wingrove [janetwingrove@gmail.com]

--------------

Disruptions in a spoken sample may decrease pre-post therapy/pre-post
sessions (controlled for spoken samples w/o therapy).

Long-term decreases in ACT compared to other therapies (pre-post
therapy) may speak to a removal of a maintaining reinforcer as opposed
to a momentary disruption that might be seen in pre-post session
information.

ivancicmartin [martin.ivancic@jirdc.org]

---------------

- (I'm working on) a comparison of CBT-biopsychosocial models and ACT/RFT models with a heavy weight on differences in ecological (and clinical) validity and functional outcome. Prediction: ACT/RFT models are more ecological valid, easier to translate in clinical interventions and have a better predictive validity on functional outcome criteria (planning to make a difference in 'solid' versus 'soft' outcome criteria to review research)

Marco Kleen
Health Psychologist, Pain team Univesity Center of Rehabilitation Groningen

-------------

In end-of-the-year Jean Dixon fashion, I'll throw in a prediction:

Often therapy uses multiple exemplars to shape functional deictic framing.
Helping people frame their clinically-relevant, evaluative self-talk
occuring HERE and NOW as THERE and THEN will likely move the AAQ-2, some
measures of "pathology" and reduce defusion.

DJ Moran

------------

Some predictions I came to think of:

ACT will help individuals to develop more behavioral flexibility, which will mean:

> motor skills will be acquired faster in an ACT+instruction+exercise condition compared to an instruction+exercise condition

> motor skills will be performed more fluently and with less training in an ACT condition

> the reported diversity of emotional experience will increase

> the observed diversity of emotional expressions (e.g. measured with Ekman's FACS) will increase

> self-ratings of goal-orientation and value-orientation will show a decrease in goal-orientation and an increase in value-orientation (e.g. in disputes with others the frequency of looking at the relationship will increase while the frequency of striving to be right will decrease)

Sorry, if others already posted similar things. I did not go through all the emails of the last few days already.

Rainer Sonntag

------------

JoAnne Dahl

1. ACT short term treatment (cheaper because shorter time and less
staff needed compared to large multidisplinary staff) empowers the
individuals own motivation by means of values work and creates more
long lasting behavior change and less pliance (short term changes
that are rule governed).

2. ACT will in the short term produce lower ratings on quality of
life that will increase significantly by the one year follow-up.
Since people are so adaptable, the initial life quality ratings will
show an adaption to a low level and ACT (especailly with the values
work) works at supporting people to see the descrepancy between one's
valued living and how one actually lives today. That descrepancy can
be devasting and that shows up in the lower quality of life ratings
and it takes time to build back up a valued life if the person has
been living in experiential avoidance.

3. ACT treatment increases "acceptance" of "clean" pain
(unconditioned response of pain to aversive stimuli) as a normal and
important phenonmena to value. And distinquishes and challenges
"dirty" pain as the conditioned thoughts and avoidance behaviors it
is. In so doing, increases in acceptance will predict increase in
activity, life quality and function.

4. ACT will be more acceptable (lower drop-outs, higher scores on
acceptability measures)

5. Clients will be more willing to confront feared stimuli since they
are working in their context of values.

6. Therapists working with ACT and chronic pain will be less "burned
out" as compared to other CBT treatments because they will not have
to "coach" the clients thru exposure of feared, painful stimuli.

7. Better results at FU

8. ACT will not result in less reports of pain but in greater
acceptance and function. Acceptance will come first and mediate
greater results in quality of life and function at follow up.

9. Outcomes on the ACT side will be mediated by changes in
willingness, defusion, and ability to act with pain.

10. ACT will do well with prevention of pain and sick leave directly
at the work site and with very difficulty clients on long term sick
leave that have failed in other programs

---------------

Ken Carpenter

I think some differences may appear under the following conditions:

1. individuals on the low end of the defusion continuum (or high end of the fusion continuum) should fair better in ACT than CBT.

(ACT directly targets this behavior thus should do a better job of building it into an individual’s repertoire comapred to CBT which does not explicitly shape it, but needs it to be established in order for individuals to test the validity of their cognitions *have to step outside a thought to evaluate it).

2. Defusion in the context of acceptance should produce greater behavioral flexibility than defusion in the context of testing content. This may be testable in both in treatment outcome and analogue/lab tests in which individuals are presented with distracter stimuli in the context of completing tasks and are given different techniques to cope with what comes up. (Steve * i think some of your lab studies on coping statements in the presence of aversive stimuli are a good starting framework for developing these kind of lab based process models). I would also predict the differences between the 2 contexts (acceptance vs challenge/test) to vary along the experiential avoidance continuum- greater group difference on the upper end (greater) EA continuum.

3. I think another area (need to think through this more) is the different predictions RFT makes concerning the stimulus control of deriving relations (thus proposing a more dynamic process and situational specific relating responses) versus the more static nature of schema. I may be wrong here, but I think a successful CBT intervention would be xpected to result in the alteration of schema - thus among those who are CBT successes * would there be a stance that resurgence should not occur since the relations having been stored and static are now changed? RFT/ACT is more likely to handle/predict resurgence even among those who are treatment responders.

RFT

Responding in accordance with a coherent relational network will take less time (on average) than responding in accordance with an incoherent network (subject, of course, to the usual caveats concerning individual histories).

Another one -- Relating derived relations will produce some of the same effects that have been observed for analogical reasoning (that might be in the review piece?).

RFT models of semantic relations, analogy, executive function tasks, perspective-taking and the like should produce neural effects that overlap to some degree with the effects observed in the mainstream neuro-cog literature.

Increasing the extent, flexibility, and fluency of relational frames,
relational networks, relating relations, relating relational networks, the transformation of functions, and contextual control over each of these, should impact positively on a variety of standard measures of human language and cognition.

Things posted to the Academy list in June

New things RFT does. RFT:

Provides new ways to do language training

Has lead to a new and increasingly empirically supported psychotherapy
(ACT) and to quite number of new psychotherapy techniques

Suggests how to establish a sense of self in children

Shows some of how to train children in "theory of mind"

Gives a process account of mindfulness

Predicts how many basic cognitive skills form

Predicts new ways to increase openness to new learning

Explains some of where psychological rigidity comes from

Leads to a new model of psychopathology

Suggests some of the core skills involves in language and its subskills such as analogy and metaphor

Shows why existing information processing research in specific areas (e.g., analogy) is flawed and show how to correct that flaw

Predicts new methods how to increase some intellectual abilities

Predicts new methods for how to increase motivation verbally

Predicts some new methods to decrease motivation verbally

Has lead to new ways we might assess current cognitive relations

Explains some of why cognitive fusion emerges, why it is harmful, and what to do about it

Explains some of why experiential avoidance emerges, why it is harmful, and what to do about it

Provides unexpected predictions about neurobiological responses to specific cognitive tasks

What happens to Crel and Cfun in RFT studies when you teach folks to apply defusion during testing, and or when you teach defusion, train, and then test? I am thinking of M Dougher's recent study with > or < relations with shock. I wonder whether defusion would alter the transformation, perhaps leading subjects to not rip off the shock electrodes in the context of > relation. I wonder whether defusion would strengthen or perhaps weaken Crel and/or Cfun. My guess is that it may result in more rapid learning of Crel, but knock out Cfun. This would be cool to show. Maybe someone has done this, but if not we really should cook up some experiments along these lines.

-j forsyth

1. Additional corollary hypotheses:
(A) Speed of acquisition of AARR during an REP task (i.e., number of trials needed to respond consistently correctly) will correlate significantly and inversely with verbal IQ. (can’t recall off hand if Denis O’Hora has already tested this specifically yet).
(B) This one would be a doozie to quantify and test, but it follows from RFT: Subjects presented with a novel metaphor who generate higher numbers of apt comparisons (especially in shorter amounts of time) will perform better (i.e., will respond correctly more frequently and given less training trials) in an REP task that assesses their ability to correctly derive relations after two previously trained frames are brought into coordination.
2. Additional corollary hypotheses:
(A) AARR in fully verbal subjects will fail to occur over time within an experimental context, given a consistent lack of reinforcement for AARR and/or consistent punishment of AARR within that context.
3. Additional corollary hypotheses:
(A) The same established verbal relation (e.g., A is similar to B, which is similar to C) can be shown to accompany different functional transformations across different experimental contexts.
(B) Identical functional transformations can be shown to be achieved through the training of different verbal relations.

J T

read some RFT-research on the change of psychological function of stimulus C by putting it in relation with A-B (sexual excitement, taste preference, mood). What if C is relationally framed with 2 different classes: A-B-C, and X-Y-C. And let's say A is experienced a bit negative, and X also a bit negative. Would C become experienced more negative, than when it's framed with only one class? This might be an operationalisation of multiple small life experiences leading to a larger reaction.

De Groot, Francis [francis.de.groot@fracarita.org]

Steven Hayes

Salud Mental y Estigma desde un punto de vista contextual. Propuesta de una Escala Dimensional sobre Estigma y Salud Mental

Salud Mental y Estigma desde un punto de vista contextual. Propuesta de una Escala Dimensional sobre Estigma y Salud Mental

ABSTRACT

En este estudio se pretendía inicialmente conocer lo que las personas que respondieron a la encuesta opinan sobre la enfermedad mental, por medio de la “Escala de Medición de Actitudes hacia los enfermos mentales en futuros técnicos de salud” (Fernández Ríos et al. 1988). Se les preguntó, con preguntas abiertas, si la sociedad era justa y solidaria con las personas con enfermedad mental, por qué y qué harían para mejorar esa situación; además, se añadieron variables sociodemográficas y de contexto (nivel de contacto con la enfermedad mental). La encuesta se difundió entre un total de 207 personas que respondieron de manera anónima. El objetivo principal fue buscar si podían encontrarse patrones de respuesta que evidencien diferencias entre grupos según el contexto en el que se encuentran. Los resultados encontraron que existían diferencias significativas con respecto al estigma entre personas con diferentes niveles de cercanía con la enfermedad mental. Estos resultados se confirmaron en lo que manifestaron los encuestados en las preguntas abiertas. Además, se hallaron diferencias en algunos aspectos relacionados con las variables sociodemográficas. Teniendo en cuenta los resultados obtenidos nos parece muy relevante el contexto de las personas a la hora de explicar estas diferencias. Pensamos, entonces, que los programas desarrollados para modificar el estigma deberían de tener en cuenta este aspecto, no solo a la hora de diseñar estrategias, sino a la hora de comprobar los resultados de las mismas, ya que, no se busca necesariamente un cambio en la forma de pensar de las personas, sino en su manera de comportarse. Partiendo de esta información elaboramos una medida de predicción sobre la conducta de las personas en el tema del estigma hacia la enfermedad mental, por medio de la construcción de un instrumento con variables cualitativas, de contexto y una versión reducida del cuestionario original que consta de 17 ítems e incluye tres dimensiones (rechazo hacia el contacto físico, rechazo hacia el contacto social, rechazo hacia la participación).
ABSTRACT

The aim of this research was, initially, to find out what do people who completed the survey think about mental illness, through the “Escala de Medición de Actitudes hacia los enfermos mentales en futuros técnicos de salud” (Fernández Ríos et al. 1988). They were asked, with open questions, if they were living in a society that’s supportive towards people affected by mental illness; what would they do to improve this situation; as well as adding socio-demographic and contextual variables (such as the level of contact with the mental illness). The research was provided to 207 people who answered anonymously. The main purpose was to find out whether response patterns, which underline differences between groups given by the context, could have been found. The results showed that the level of stigma varied significantly depending on the closeness with the mental illness. These results were confirmed in the answers given by the surveyed to the open questions. In addition, differences between some aspects related to the socio-demographical variables were found. By analysing the obtained results, it seems that people’s context is very relevant when it comes to explain these differences. We think that the programmes developed to change the stigma should take this aspecto into consideration: not only when it’s time to plan a strategy, but also when it comes to prove the results. We are not talking about a change in the way people are thinking, we are referring to their behaviour. Starting from this information we elaborated a way to predict people's behaviour and their stigma towards those who are affected by mental illness, through a tool that contains qualitative and context variables and a limited version of the original survey (which consisted of 17 items and three dimensions: refusal towards physical contact, refusal towards social contact and refusal towards participation).

Domingo JESÚS …