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Bach Hayes 2002

APA Citation

Bach, P., & Hayes, S. C. (2002). The use of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy to prevent the rehospitalization of psychotic patients: A randomized controlled trial. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 70(5), 1129-1139. https://doi.org/10.1037/0022-006X.70.5.1129

Publication Topic
ACT: Empirical
Publication Type
Article
RCT
Language
English
Keyword(s)
ACT, psychotic, shizophrenia, rehospitalization, delusions
Abstract

The present study examined the impact of a brief version of an acceptance-based treatment (acceptance and commitment therapy; ACT) that teaches patients to accept unavoidable private events; to identify and focus on actions directed toward valued goals; and to defuse from odd cognition, just noticing thoughts rather than treating them as either true or false. Eighty inpatient participants with positive psychotic symptoms were randomly assigned to treatment as usual (TAU) or to 4 sessions of ACT plus TAU. ACT participants showed significantly higher symptom reporting and lower symptom believability and a rate of rehospitalization half that of TAU participants over a 4-month follow-up period. The same basic pattern of results was seen with all participant subgroups except delusional participants who denied symptoms.

Comments
Shows that a three-hour ACT intervention reduces rehospitalization by 50% over a 4 month follow-up as compared to treatment as usual in the seriously mentally ill.