Development and evaluation of an 1-day Acceptance and Commitment Therapy workshop for Veterans with comorbid chronic pain, TBI, and psychological distress: Outcomes from a pilot study

Lilian Dindo, Adrienne L Johnson, Brent Lang, Merlyn Rodrigues, Lindsey Martin, Ricardo Jorge, Lilian Dindo, Adrienne L Johnson, Brent Lang, Merlyn Rodrigues, Lindsey Martin, Ricardo Jorge

Abstract

Objectives: To 1) develop and refine a 1-day trans-diagnostic psychotherapeutic "ACT on Life" workshop tailored for Veterans with mild traumatic brain injury, stress-based psychopathology, and pain; 2) examine the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary effects of this intervention.

Setting: A Veterans Health Administration medical center.

Participants: Veterans returning from Operations Iraqi Freedom, Enduring Freedom, and New Dawn with mild TBI, stress-based psychopathology, and chronic pain.

Design: Phase I involved development of the intervention by experts and subsequent refinement based on Veteran feedback (N = 11). Phase II was a pilot randomized controlled trial comparing the effects of the revised intervention (N = 20) to treatment as usual (TAU; N = 12).

Main measures: For phase I, qualitative feedback at 2 weeks and 3 months post-workshop was obtained from Veterans. For phase II, quantitative measures included the PTSD Checklist, Depression Anxiety and Stress Scale, Military-to-Civilian Questionnaire, WHO-Disability Assessment Schedule, Brief Pain Inventory, Acceptance and Action Questionnaire.

Results: Veterans found the workshop acceptable, innovative and useful. Quantitative data from phase II suggested that participants in the ACT group, relative to TAU, showed improvement in psychiatric symptoms, functioning, and reintegration 3 months post-workshop. Unexpectedly, pain interference was lower in the TAU group at follow-up.

Conclusions: Preliminary results support the feasibility, acceptability, and promising effects on psychological distress and community reintegration of this 1-day, transdiagnostic workshop for Veterans. Future research examining the effectiveness of this workshop with a larger sample size is necessary.

Keywords: Acceptance and commitment therapy; Brief psychotherapies; Qualitative research; Quantitative evaluation; Traumatic brain injury; Veterans.

Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of Competing Interest None.

Published by Elsevier Inc.

Figures

Fig. 1.
Fig. 1.
CONSORT diagram of the flow of participants in the RCT. Note: ACT = Acceptance and Commitment Therapy; TAU = Treatment as Usual.

Source: PubMed

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