Guest guest Posted December 13, 2011 Report Share Posted December 13, 2011 This is EXCELLENT!Incorporating ACT principles into ERP for OCD sufferers is a wonderful idea!I am also a member of the OCD Support Group, co-moderated by some amazing psychologists. And from reading posts there, i can absolutely c how incorporating mindfulness principles (acceptance, defusion, observers perspective, connecting with ur present moment) can be very effective while dealing with the intrusive/obsessive thoughts, and while doing those painful exposures + attaching a positive reinforment (ur values) ,vs a neg one (symptom reduction), can be a better motivational factor for baring the immense anxiety that comes from resisting any compulsion, and have much more long lasting results in behaviour change. I also believe incorporating ACT principles into ERP is absolutely needed for those diagnosed with scrupulosity, especially those who also suffer from HOCD or r actually gay. wasalaam:-)-K Designs."To: ACT_for_the_Public From: disi@...Date: Tue, 13 Dec 2011 16:25:01 +0000Subject: ACT research (M. Twohig) is awarded a 2011 grant from the IOCDF International OCD Foundation 2011 Grant Award Recipient Combining Acceptance and Commitment Therapy with Exposure and Response Prevention to Enhance Treatment Engagement Twohig, PhD, Assistant Professor, Utah State University Award Amount: $50,344 The goal of this proposal is to increase the acceptability and client engagement in Exposure with Response Prevention (ERP). Recent research has shown that Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), without in-session exposure, is an effective treatment for OCD, and it has high acceptability and low refusal and drop-out rates. Research has also shown that procedures taken from ACT can increase engagement in exposures for anxiety disorders. Still, the most logical way for ACT to be implemented for OCD is within an exposure framework. Based on past research, it appears that conducing ACT within an ERP framework should result in high levels of treatment engagement and high acceptability. This study will treat 60 adults with ACT using either traditional ERP or ACT+ERP. Investigators will look at levels of treatment engagement (i.e., number of exposures, how well were exposures attempted, how much response prevention occurred?), and acceptability. If treatment engagement and acceptability can be increased, it is likely that greater improvement could be seen in OCD reduction in a larger study. This is a collaborative cross-site study with leading ACT (Dr. Twohig) and ERP (Dr. Abramowitz) researchers. http://ocfoundation.org/Research.aspx Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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