ACBS Newsletter - February 2015
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ACBS World Conference 13 in Berlin registration now open!
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BBC Interview with Nic HooperACBS researcher and blogger Nic Hooper appears on BBC Radio Bristol with Phil Hammond. Dr. Hammond is a general practitioner who has written or presented several medical problems for the BBC including “Trust Me, I'm a Doctor” on BBC Two where he highlighted medical disparity in the national health service. Our own Nic Hooper appears on a recent episode of Phil Hammond's radio program where he is joined by folk singer Norma Waters. The interaction between the three provides a great context for introducing ACT to a more general audience. Other topics discussed include the CBS approach to suffering, the differences between traditional CBT and ACT, and the various applications of ACT both in terms of clinical presentations and modality of treatment. Click here to listen to the interview, Nic Hooper comes on at the 1:07 mark. Listen soon as the episode is only available until February 15th. You can also visit Nic's blog here for more discussion of CBS topics written for a broad audience. . |
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Q&A with Jill Stoddard and Niloofar Afari authors of The Big Book of ACT MetaphorsIn this Q&A Jill Stoddard and Niloofar Afari discuss their new Big Book of ACT Metaphors: A Practitioner’s Guide to Experiential Exercises and Metaphors in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy. In particular they talk about the utility of metaphors within the ACT model, give examples of metaphors and exercises which target different processes, and briefly discuss how clinicians can build their own powerful metaphors in session. “In contrast to some other therapies, ACT focuses not on changing the content of internal experiences (i.e., thoughts and feelings) but rather on one’s relationship to them. Changing that relationship cannot be accomplished by using the very cognitive processes that resulted in psychological inflexibility in the first place. ... Metaphors and exercises, while comprised of language, are not critical, rigid, or literal; they are subtle stories that listeners can connect to their personal experiences to achieve a better understanding of the self.” Click here for the full Q&A. |
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JCBS article examines the utility of ACT processes in improving children's healthy food choice
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Chronic Pain in Maine: An integrated approachA recent article from Maine’s NPR news source highlights a new ACT-based chronic pain treatment group that was designed and developed by Stephen Hull, MD, long-term pain specialist and physiatrist on the pain unit at Mercy Hospital in Portland, Maine. He has been interested in ACT for some time and currently President of the Pain Sig. The program was designed with multiple purposes in mind including to encourage a more behavioral and psychosocial approach to pain. Steve is current on the science of medical pain treatment and is well aware of the concerning data about long-term use of opioid pain medications, their poor record of effectiveness for chronic pain, and risks for both chemical dependency and hyperalgesia. Thus, the program was designed, in part, to permit a "soft landing" for patients tapering off of pain medications and to give them a set of tools for coping and support as they pursued another path forward. The groups, which were presented in detail at last year’s ACBS conference, focus on the ACT Matrix, differentiating hurt vs. harm, education about chronic pain, coping both with pain and lots of other comorbid and related conditions. Unique to this program are several adaptations of the ACT Matrix including a values card sorting task and relapse preparedness using the Matrix to envision what a return to previous patterns of coping might look like and then rehearse how to respond by Noticing and responding more from values and using the Toward moves and effective coping they have learned. The NPR article does a wonderful job of illustrating the journey many chronic pain patients follow before they end up being referred to behavioral treatment. Click here to read the full article and if you have an aligned interest in the domain, click here to join the Pain Special Interest Group. |
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