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Acceptance and commitment therapy focused on repetitive negative thinking for child depression: A randomized multiple-baseline evaluation

APA Citation

Salazar, D. M., Ruiz, F. J., RamĂ­rez, E. S., & Cardona-Betancourt, V. (2020). Acceptance and commitment therapy focused on repetitive negative thinking for child depression: A randomized multiple-baseline evaluation. The Psychological Record, 70, 373-386. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40732-019-00362-5

Publication Topic
ACT: Empirical
Publication Type
Article
RCT
Language
English
Keyword(s)
Child depression, Acceptance and commitment therapy, Relational frame theory, Repetitive negative thinking
Abstract

The current study analyzes the efficacy of acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) focused on repetitive negative thinking (RNT) for child depression. A randomized, nonconcurrent, multiple-baseline design was conducted with nine children, aged between 8 and 13 years, who showed a main diagnosis of child depression. Measures of psychological inflexibility, RNT, and generalized pliance were administered on a weekly basis throughout the study, whereas measures of emotional symptoms and parents’ report of problematic behavior were applied at pretreatment, posttreatment, and the 4-week follow-up. All participants showed evidence of a treatment effect for psychological inflexibility and RNT. The standardized mean difference effect sizes for single-case experimental designs were very large for these measures. No participant showed the diagnosis of child depression or comorbid disorders at the 4-week follow-up. Pretreatment to follow-up changes in emotional symptoms and problematic behavior reported by parents were statistically significant, with large effect sizes. RNT-focused ACT interventions for child depression deserve further empirical tests.