Scott Whitney, Hann Katie E J, McCracken Lance M
Health Psychology Section, Psychology Department, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, King's College London, Guy's Campus, 5th Floor Bermondsey Wing, London, SE1 9RT UK.
Health Psychology Section, Psychology Department, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, King's College London, Guy's Campus, 5th Floor Bermondsey Wing, London, SE1 9RT UK ; INPUT Pain Management, Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK.
J Contemp Psychother. 2016;46:139-148. doi: 10.1007/s10879-016-9328-5. Epub 2016 Mar 2.
Acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) for chronic pain aims to improve patient functioning by fostering greater psychological flexibility. While promising, ACT treatment process research in the context of chronic pain so far has only focused on a few of the processes of psychological flexibility. Therefore, this study aimed to more comprehensively examine changes in processes of psychological flexibility following an ACT-based treatment for chronic pain, and to examine change in these processes in relation to improvements in patient functioning. Individuals with chronic pain attending an interdisciplinary ACT-based rehabilitation program completed measures of pain, functioning, depression, pain acceptance, cognitive fusion, decentering, and committed action at pre- and post-treatment and during a nine-month follow-up. Significant improvements were observed from pre- to post-treatment and pre-treatment to follow-up on each of the treatment outcome and process variables. Regression analyses indicated that change in psychological flexibility processes cumulatively explained 6-27 % of the variance in changes in functioning and depression over both assessment periods, even after controlling for changes in pain intensity. Further research is needed to maximize the effectiveness of ACT for chronic pain, and to determine whether larger improvements in the processes of psychological flexibility under study will produce better patient outcomes, as predicted by the psychological flexibility model.
用于慢性疼痛的接纳与承诺疗法(ACT)旨在通过培养更强的心理灵活性来改善患者的功能状况。尽管前景乐观,但迄今为止,在慢性疼痛背景下进行的ACT治疗过程研究仅聚焦于心理灵活性的少数几个过程。因此,本研究旨在更全面地考察基于ACT的慢性疼痛治疗后心理灵活性过程的变化,并考察这些过程的变化与患者功能改善之间的关系。参加基于ACT的跨学科康复项目的慢性疼痛患者在治疗前、治疗后以及九个月的随访期间完成了疼痛、功能、抑郁、疼痛接纳、认知融合、去中心化和承诺行动等方面的测量。在每个治疗结果和过程变量上,从治疗前到治疗后以及从治疗前到随访期间均观察到了显著改善。回归分析表明,即使在控制了疼痛强度的变化之后,心理灵活性过程的变化在两个评估期内累计解释了功能和抑郁变化中6%至27%的方差。需要进一步的研究来使ACT治疗慢性疼痛的效果最大化,并确定如心理灵活性模型所预测的那样,所研究的心理灵活性过程中更大的改善是否会产生更好的患者预后。