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The Hexaflex Dimensional Approach to Diagnostics

from 

Wilson, K. G. (2006). The Heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy. 

Wilson, K. G. (May, 2007) The hexaflex diagnostic: A fully dimensional approach to assessment, treatment, and case conceptualization. Presidential address presented at the annual convention of the Association for Contextual Behavioral Science, Houston, TX. 

Empirical clinical psychology has largely been focused on measurement of the frequency and severity of various signs and symptoms and the treatment of psychological syndromes defined by clusters of signs and symptoms (DSM disorders for the most part). These syndromes have increasingly organized clinical psychology in spite of much criticism. It is imperative for us to understand that this is not as trivial as would be yet another theory of psychopathology. In such an instance, the presence of the theory might organize the activities of a relatively small group of individuals who share the area of research interest. Supposedly atheoretical syndromal classification, as seen in the DSM, has had a much more far reaching impact. Our central federal funding agency, the National Institutes of Mental Health, is organized around these categories, as are our abnormal psychology textbooks, journals, assessment instruments, and reimbursement for professional services. Such hegemony is wholly unwarranted based upon available evidence. Concerns about syndromal classification of psychological problems has been around for a good long time. However, only recently has dawn begun to break within the DSM effort. 

The failure of syndromal classification carries with it a call for alternatives. At the University of Mississippi Center for Contextual Psychology and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Treatment Development Group, we are exploring an alternative approach. Based on the idea that multiple systems of classification ought to compete with the gold standard being the treatment utility of the system of problem classification, we are currently pursuing the development and testing of the hexaflex model as the kernel of a fully dimensional diagnostic system within which there exists close linkage between diagnosis, assessment, and intervention. 

Posted below are 1) slides from the plenary session in which the Hexaflex Diagnostic was presented at the ACT Summer Institute and 2) draft versions of clinician worksheets designed to facilitate use of the hexaflex model in this way. Please feel free to offer any feedback you might have as to the utility of the model and tools presented here. Send feedback to Kelly Wilson at kwilson@olemiss.edu These documents are extracted from a book in progress "The Heart of ACT," please copy and use at will for clinical practice and research. Distribute only with express consent of the author. 

peace all, 

Kelly

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