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Mindfulness Skills & Psychological Flexibility with distressing voices

Mindfulness Skills & Psychological Flexibility with distressing voices. Eric Morris, Emmanuelle Peters & Philippa Garety Institute of Psychiatry, King’s College London South London & Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust. ACT, mindfulness and psychosis.

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Mindfulness Skills & Psychological Flexibility with distressing voices

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  1. Mindfulness Skills & Psychological Flexibility with distressing voices Eric Morris, Emmanuelle Peters & Philippa Garety Institute of Psychiatry, King’s College London South London & Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust

  2. ACT, mindfulness and psychosis • Acceptance based approaches focus on changing the relationship to thoughts and feelings (rather than directly changing content) to increase behavioural flexibility • Some preliminary evidence with psychosis (e.g., Bach & Hayes, 2002; Chadwick, Newman Taylor & Abba, 2005; Gaudiano & Herbert, 2006) • Models consider distress and disability resulting from experiential avoidance, over-literality about thoughts/experiences, inability to persist with valued actions

  3. Voice hearing and distress/disability • Cognitive models suggest that distress and disability associated with voices is partly a function of appraisals of voice power and intentions (e.g., Chadwick & Birchwood, 1994; Beck & Rector, 2003) • Acceptance models, in addition, consider how people relate to appraisals in general (“fused” literality vs observing, mindful), with the aim of finding ways to influence this relating

  4. Relationship of experiential avoidance with psychosis? Indirect evidence suggesting this: • people who cope poorly with voices tend to rely largely upon distraction and thought-suppression strategies (Romme and Escher, 1993). • suppression-based coping strategies may exacerbate intrusive thoughts, psychological distress, autonomic arousal, and auditory hallucinations (Morrison, Haddock and Tarrier, 1995). • Interventions based on distraction when compared to focusing (Haddock et al., 1998) appear to come at personal cost – with poorer outcomes for self esteem during treatment

  5. Focus of the current study • What relationships are there between psychological flexibility, mindfulness skills and previously found predictors of distress and disability in voice hearing? • Does acceptance and mindfulness have any additional predictive power?

  6. Psychological Flexibility Behavioural Responses to voices Perceived power of voices Distress & Disruption

  7. Measuring Psychological Flexibility & Mindfulness Acceptance and Action Questionnaire – II (Bond et al, submitted) • Measures experiential avoidance/ acceptance and willingness (based on ACT constructs) Kentucky Inventory of Mindfulness Skills (Baer, Smith & Allen, 2004) • Measures skills in mindfulness, based on DBT constructs: Observe, Describe, Act with Awareness, Accept Without Judgement

  8. Design & Participants • Using a cross-sectional design, involving the participation of distressed voice hearers (N = 50) • Diagnosed with mental illness and receiving treatment for auditory hallucinations • Recruited from community (N=35) and inpatient settings (N=15)

  9. Demographics • 33 male, 17 female • Mean age = 31.8 (range 18 – 56) • Mean length of time hearing voices = 9 years (range 3 months – 33 years) • Chart ICD Diagnoses: • F20 – F29 = 45 (90%) • Mood disorder F30 – 39 = 5 (10%) • Prescribed current medication for psychosis: 47 (94%) • Ethnicity: White 18 (36%), Black 22 (44%), Mixed 4 (8%), Asian 3 (6%), Other 3 (6%) • Employment: Unemployed 37 (74%), student 7 (14%), Employed p/t 3 (6%), Employed f/t 3 (6%)

  10. Measures • Psychological flexibility & Mindfulness (AAQ-II & KIMS) • Voice Appraisals– Beliefs about Voices Questionnaire- Revised (Chadwick, Lees & Birchwood, 2000) • General Distress - BDI & BAI • Coping with thoughts - Thought Control Questionnaire (Wells & Davies, 1994) • Multidimensional assessment of voices - PSYRATS-auditory hallucinations subscale (Haddock et al., 1999)

  11. Descriptives for sample

  12. Data analysis strategy • To assess the study questions a series of hierarchical regression analyses were conducted • Independent variables were chosen on the basis of correlation statistical significance with the dependent variable, and entered in Step 1 • Then as Step 2 the KIMS (Acceptance) and AAQ-II (Psychological Flexibility) variables were entered

  13. Appraisals of omnipotence

  14. Amount of voice distress

  15. Life disruption from voices

  16. Responding to voices

  17. General distress (BDI+BAI)

  18. Summary of Results Acceptance and psychological flexibility add modest predictive power for: • general distress, • voice-specific amount of distress, • and appraisals of omnipotence. when combined with previously identified independent variables in cognitive models. Non-significant, but “trend”, relationships for predicting disruption and resistance to voices.

  19. Study limitations • Cross-sectional design • Sample (distressed voice hearers) • Use of general measures of mindfulness and psychological flexibility (compared to symptom specific measures, e.g. Voices Acceptance and Action Scale; Shawyer et al., 2007) • Less “contextual” measures

  20. Clinical Implications/Questions • What does the AAQ-2 measure? • There may be some modest predictive power in incorporating mindfulness and acceptance for understanding some aspects of distressed voice hearing (taking just a predictive model stance) • But from a functional contextual stance we are also looking for variables to influence, not simply explain… • ACT model suggests that non-judgemental awareness of experiences is a skill that can be taught – can this be done with distressed voice hearers and does it allow them to have greater response flexibility?

  21. Eric.Morris@iop.kcl.ac.uk

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