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The Potential of Community-Wide Strategies for Promoting Psychological Flexibility

APA Citation

Levin, M. E., Lillis, J., & Biglan, A. (2015). The Potential of Community-Wide Strategies for Promoting Psychological Flexibility. The Wiley Handbook of Contextual Behavioral Science, 483-495.

Publication Topic
ACT: Conceptual
CBS: Conceptual
Publication Type
Book
Language
English
Keyword(s)
ACT, CBS, psychological flexibility, public health approach
Abstract

This chapter explores that there is enough evidence to justify efforts to increase the prevalence of psychological flexibility in populations and examines the impact of such increases on population well-being. It briefly describes ideas for increasing the prevalence of psychological flexibility and the research that could advance this goal. Empirical work on population-based acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) interventions could move forward in numerous ways. A contextual behavioral science (CBS) analysis highlights the importance of additional public health factors, including promoting and reinforcing positive intergroup behaviors as well as increasing psychological flexibility. The chapter shows how a CBS approach might target a prevalent, multifaceted societal issue through a combination of strategies seeking to prevent discriminatory behaviors and promote positive intergroup contact in the context of psychological flexibility processes including personal values, perspective-taking/empathy, and awareness, acceptance, and defusion from prejudiced reactions.