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Acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT, typically pronounced as the word "act") is a form of psychotherapy, as well as a branch of clinical behavior analysis. It is an empirically-based psychological intervention that uses acceptance and mindfulness strategies along with commitment and behavior-change strategies to increase psychological flexibility.
Acceptance and commitment therapy | |
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MeSH | D064869 |
This approach was first called comprehensive distancing.Steven C. Hayes developed it around 1982 to integrate features of cognitive therapy and behavior analysis, especially behavior analytic data on the often negative effects of verbal rules and how they might be ameliorated.
ACT protocols vary with the target behavior and the setting. For example, in behavioral health, a brief version of ACT is focused acceptance and commitment therapy (FACT).
The goal of ACT is not to eliminate difficult feelings but to be present with what life brings and to "move toward valued behavior".: 240 Acceptance and commitment therapy invites people to open up to unpleasant feelings, not to overreact to them, and not to avoid situations that cause them.
Its therapeutic effect aims to be a positive spiral, in which more understanding of one's emotions leads to a better understanding of the truth. In ACT, "truth" is measured through the concept of "workability", or what works to take another step toward what matters (e.g., values, meaning).
Technique
Basics
ACT is developed within a pragmatic philosophy, functional contextualism. ACT is based on relational frame theory (RFT), a comprehensive theory of language and cognition that is derived from behavior analysis. Both ACT and RFT are based on B. F. Skinner's philosophy of radical behaviorism.
ACT differs from some kinds of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) in that, rather than try to teach people to control their thoughts, feelings, sensations, memories, and other private events, ACT teaches them to "just notice", accept, and embrace their private events, especially previously unwanted ones. ACT helps the individual get in contact with a transcendent sense of self, "self-as-context"—the one who is always there observing and experiencing and yet distinct from one's thoughts, feelings, sensations, and memories. ACT tries to help the individual clarify values and then use them as the basis for action, bringing more vitality and meaning to life in the process, while increasing psychological flexibility.
While Western psychology has typically operated under the "healthy normality" assumption, which states that humans naturally are psychologically healthy, ACT assumes that the psychological processes of a normal human mind are often destructive. The core conception of ACT is that psychological suffering is usually caused by experiential avoidance, cognitive entanglement, and resulting psychological rigidity that leads to a failure to take needed behavioral steps in accord with core values. As a simple way to summarize the model, ACT views the core of many problems to be due to the concepts represented in the acronym, FEAR:
- Fusion with your thoughts
- Evaluation of experience
- Avoidance of your experience
- Reason-giving for your behavior
And the healthy alternative is to ACT:
- Accept your thoughts and emotions
- Choose a valued direction
- Take action
Core principles
ACT commonly employs six core principles to help clients develop psychological flexibility:
- Cognitive defusion: Learning methods to reduce the tendency to reify thoughts, images, emotions, and memories.
- Acceptance: Allowing unwanted private experiences (thoughts, feelings and urges) to come and go without struggling with them.
- Contact with the present moment: Awareness of the here and now, experienced with openness, interest, and receptiveness. (e.g., mindfulness)
- The observing self: Accessing a transcendent sense of self, a continuity of consciousness which is unchanging.
- Values: Discovering what is most important to oneself.
- Committed action: Setting goals according to values and carrying them out responsibly, in the service of a meaningful life.
Correlational evidence has found that absence of psychological flexibility predicts many forms of psychopathology. A 2005 meta-analysis showed that the six ACT principles, on average, account for 16–29% of the variance in psychopathology (general mental health, depression, anxiety) at baseline, depending on the measure, using correlational methods.: 12–13 A 2012 meta-analysis of 68 laboratory-based studies on ACT components has also provided support for the link between psychological flexibility concepts and specific components.
Research
The website of the Association for Contextual Behavioral Science states that there were over 1,100 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of ACT, over 500 meta-analyses/systematic reviews, and 84 mediational studies of the ACT literature as of June 2024.
Organizations that have stated that acceptance and commitment therapy is empirically supported in certain areas or as a whole according to their standards include (as of March 2022):
- Society of Clinical Psychology (American Psychological Association/APA Division 12)
- World Health Organization
- UK National Institute for Health and Care Excellence
- Australian Psychological Society
- Netherlands Institute of Psychologists: Sections of Neuropsychology and Rehabilitation
- Netherlands National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM)
- Sweden Association of Physiotherapists
- SAMHSA's National Registry of Evidence-based Programs and Practices
- California Evidence-Based Clearinghouse for Child Welfare
- U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs/Department of Defense
- US Department of Justice - Office of Justice Programs
- Washington State Institute for Public Policy
- American Headache Society
History
In 2006, only about 30 randomized clinical trials and controlled time series evaluating ACT were known, in 2011 the number had doubled to more than 60 ACT randomized controlled trials, and in 2023 there were more than 1,000 randomized controlled trials of ACT worldwide. A 2008 meta-analysis concluded that the evidence was still too limited for ACT to be considered a supported treatment. A 2009 meta-analysis found that ACT was more effective than placebo and "treatment as usual" for most problems. A 2012 meta-analysis was more positive and reported that ACT outperformed CBT, except for treating depression and anxiety. A 2015 review found that ACT was better than placebo and typical treatment for anxiety disorders, depression, and addiction. Its effectiveness was similar to traditional treatments like cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). The authors also noted that research methodologies had improved since the studies described in the 2008 meta-analysis.
In 2020, a review of meta-analyses examined 20 meta-analyses that included 133 studies and 12,477 participants. The authors concluded ACT is efficacious for all conditions examined, including anxiety, depression, substance use, pain, and transdiagnostic groups. Results also showed that ACT was generally superior to inactive controls, treatment as usual, and most active intervention conditions.
In 2020–2021, after three RCTs of ACT by the World Health Organization (WHO), WHO released an ACT-based self-help course Self-Help Plus (SH+) for "groups of up to 30 people who have lived through or are living through adversity". As of July 2023, there are six RCTs of Self-Help Plus.
In 2022, a systematic review of meta-analyses about interventions for depressive symptoms in people living with chronic pain concluded "Acceptance and commitment therapy for general chronic pain, and fluoxetine and web-based psychotherapy for fibromyalgia showed the most robust effects and can be prioritized for implementation in clinical practice".
Professional organizations
The Association for Contextual Behavioral Science is committed to research and development in the area of ACT, RFT, and contextual behavioral science more generally. As of 2023 it had over 8,000 members worldwide, about half outside of the United States. It holds annual "world conference" meetings each summer, with the location alternating between North America, Europe, and South America.
The Association for Behavior Analysis International (ABAI) has a special interest group for practitioner issues, behavioral counseling, and clinical behavior analysis ABA:I. ABAI has larger special interest groups for autism and behavioral medicine. ABAI serves as the core intellectual home for behavior analysts. ABAI sponsors three conferences/year—one multi-track in the U.S., one specific to autism and one international.
The Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies (ABCT) also has an interest group in behavior analysis, which focuses on clinical behavior analysis. ACT work is commonly presented at ABCT and other mainstream CBT organizations.
The British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies (BABCP) has a large special interest group in ACT, with over 1,200 members.
Doctoral-level behavior analysts who are psychologists belong to the American Psychological Association's (APA) Division 25—Behavior analysis. ACT has been called a "commonly used treatment with empirical support" within the APA-recognized specialty of behavioral and cognitive psychology.
Similarities
ACT, dialectical behavior therapy (DBT), functional analytic psychotherapy (FAP), mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) and other acceptance- and mindfulness-based approaches have been grouped by Steven Hayes under the name "the third wave of cognitive behavior therapy". However, this classification has been criticized and not everyone agrees with it. For example, David Dozois and Aaron T. Beck argued that there is no "new wave" and that there are a variety of extensions of cognitive therapy; for example, Jeffrey Young's schema therapy came after Beck's cognitive therapy but Young did not name his innovations "the third wave" or "the third generation" of cognitive behavior therapy.
According to Hayes' classification, the first wave, behaviour therapy, commenced in the 1920s based on Pavlov's classical (respondent) conditioning and operant conditioning that was correlated to reinforcing consequences. The second wave emerged in the 1970s and included cognition in the form of irrational beliefs, dysfunctional attitudes or depressogenic attributions.[page needed] In the late 1980s empirical limitations and philosophical misgivings of the second wave gave rise to Steven Hayes' ACT theory which modified the focus of abnormal behaviour away from the content or form towards the context in which it occurs.[page needed] People's rigid ideas about themselves, their lack of focus on what is important in their life, and their struggle to change sensations, feelings or thoughts that are troublesome only serve to create greater distress.
Steven C. Hayes described the third wave in his ABCT President Address as follows:
Grounded in an empirical, principle-focused approach, the third wave of behavioral and cognitive therapy is particularly sensitive to the context and functions of psychological phenomena, not just their form, and thus tends to emphasize contextual and experiential change strategies in addition to more direct and didactic ones. These treatments tend to seek the construction of broad, flexible and effective repertoires over an eliminative approach to narrowly defined problems, and to emphasize the relevance of the issues they examine for clinicians as well as clients. The third wave reformulates and synthesizes previous generations of behavioral and cognitive therapy and carries them forward into questions, issues, and domains previously addressed primarily by other traditions, in hopes of improving both understanding and outcomes.
ACT has also been adapted to create a non-therapy version of the same processes called acceptance and commitment training. This training process, oriented towards the development of mindfulness, acceptance, and valued skills in non-clinical settings such as businesses or schools, has also been investigated in a handful of research studies with good preliminary results.[page needed]
The emphasis of ACT on ongoing present moment awareness, valued directions and committed action is similar to other psychotherapeutic approaches that, unlike ACT, are not as focused on outcome research or consciously linked to a basic behavioral science program, including approaches such as Gestalt therapy, Morita therapy, and others. Hayes and colleagues themselves stated in their book that introduced ACT that "many or even most of the techniques in ACT have been borrowed from elsewhere—from the human potential movement, Eastern traditions, behavior therapy, mystical traditions, and the like".
Wilson, Hayes & Byrd explored at length the compatibilities between ACT and the 12-step treatment of addictions and argued that, unlike most other psychotherapies, both approaches can be implicitly or explicitly integrated due to their broad commonalities. Both approaches endorse acceptance as an alternative to unproductive control. ACT emphasizes the hopelessness of relying on ineffectual strategies to control private experience, similarly the 12-step approach emphasizes the acceptance of powerlessness over addiction. Both approaches encourage a broad life-reorientation, rather than a narrow focus on the elimination of substance use, and both place great value on the long-term project of building of a meaningful life aligned with the clients' values. ACT and 12-step both encourage the pragmatic utility of cultivating a transcendent sense of self (higher power) within an unconventional, individualized spirituality. Finally they both openly accept the paradox that acceptance is a necessary condition for change and both encourage a playful awareness of the limitations of human thinking.
Criticism
The textbook Systems of Psychotherapy: A Transtheoretical Analysis includes various criticisms of third-wave behaviour therapy, including ACT, from the perspectives of other systems of psychotherapy, including the complaint that third-wave therapies "display an annoying tendency to gather effective methods from other traditions and label them as their own".
Evidence-based practice
In a 2012 blog post, psychologist James C. Coyne criticized the process and studies initially used by the APA to favorably evaluate ACT for the treatment of psychosis in its labeling system for evidence-based medicine. In particular, it relied on only one full randomized trial, supplemented by a pilot study and a feasibility study, despite the criteria for "strong evidence" requiring a treatment to be supported by many such trials. The main study used (Bach and Hayes, 2002) was alleged not to have clearly specified its hypothesis—that ACT reduces rehospitalization—in advance of the conducted analysis: a practice in which researchers retrospectively cherry-pick the metric showing the largest claim-supporting change post-treatment. In 2016, this and other critiques were cited by William O'Donohue and co-authors in a paper on ACT "weak and pseudo-tests", adding that while "no doubt there are studies of ACT that are quite good", they had examined three trials of ACT that were "weakened and thus made easier to pass", and they listed over 30 ways in which such trials were "weak or pseudo-tests". Drawing on concepts from Karl Popper's philosophy of science and Popper's critique of psychoanalysis as impossible to falsify, O'Donohue and colleagues advocated Popperian severe testing instead.
Excessive promotion over other therapies
In 2013, psychologist Jonathan W. Kanter said that Hayes and colleagues "argue that empirical clinical psychology is hampered in its efforts to alleviate human suffering and present contextual behavioral science (CBS) to address the basic philosophical, theoretical and methodological shortcomings of the field. CBS represents a host of good ideas but at times the promise of CBS is obscured by excessive promotion of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) and Relational Frame Theory (RFT) and demotion of earlier cognitive and behavior change techniques in the absence of clear logic and empirical support." Nevertheless, Kanter concluded that "the ideas of CBS, RFT, and ACT deserve serious consideration by the mainstream community and have great potential to shape a truly progressive clinical science to guide clinical practice".
Authors of a 2013 paper comparing ACT to cognitive therapy (CT) concluded that "although preliminary research on ACT is promising, we suggest that its proponents need to be appropriately humble in their claims. In particular, like CT, ACT cannot yet make strong claims that its unique and theory-driven intervention components are active ingredients in its effects." The authors of the paper suggested that many of the assumptions of ACT and CT "are pre-analytical, and cannot be directly pitted against one another in experimental tests."
In 2012, ACT appeared to be about as effective as standard CBT, with some meta-analyses showing small differences in favor of ACT and others not. For example, a meta-analysis published by Francisco Ruiz in 2012 looked at 16 studies comparing ACT to standard CBT. ACT failed to separate from CBT on effect sizes for anxiety, however modest benefits were found with ACT compared to CBT for depression and quality of life. The author found a separation between ACT and CBT on the "primary outcome"—a heterogeneous class of 14 separate outcome measures aggregated into the effect size analysis. However, the study is limited by the highly heterogeneous nature of the outcome variables used in the analysis, which tends to increase the number needed to treat (NNT) to replicate the effect size reported. More limited measures, such as depression, anxiety, and quality of life, decrease the NNT, making the analysis more clinically relevant, and on these measures, ACT did not outperform CBT. A 2012 clinical trial by Forman et al. found that Beckian CBT obtained better results than ACT.
Several theoretical and empirical concerns have arisen in response to the ascendancy of ACT. One theoretical concern was that ACT's primary authors and the corresponding theories of human behavior, relational frame theory (RFT) and functional contextualism (FC), recommended their approach as the proverbial holy grail of psychological therapies. In 2012, in the preface to the second edition of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, the primary authors of ACT clarified that "ACT has not been created to undercut the traditions from which it came, nor does it claim to be a panacea.": x
See also
- Behavioral psychotherapy
- Contextualism
- Decisional balance sheet § Four square tool
- Defence mechanism
- Humanistic psychology
- Positive psychology
- Solution-focused brief therapy
References
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Though mindfulness- and acceptance-based strategies have not been emphasized in cognitive therapy relative to cognitive change interventions, their general approaches are not inconsistent with the cognitive model, and the approaches are, in many respects, more similar than distinct ... Congruent with this argument, we view these approaches as extensions or complementary components of cognitive therapy and not a "third wave" per se (see Hofmann, 2008a; Hofmann & Asmundson, 2008).
- Leahy, Robert L., ed. (2004). Contemporary cognitive therapy: theory, research, and practice. New York: Guilford Press. ISBN 159385062X. OCLC 55228722.
- Hayes, Steven C.; Smith, Spencer Xavier (2005). Get out of your mind & into your life: the new acceptance & commitment therapy. A New Harbinger self-help workbook. Oakland, CA: New Harbinger Publications. ISBN 9781572244252. OCLC 61229775.
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- Hayes, Steven C.; Bond, Frank W.; Barnes-Holmes, Dermot; Austin, John, eds. (2006). Acceptance and mindfulness at work: applying acceptance and commitment therapy and relational frame theory to organizational behavior management. New York: Haworth Press. doi:10.4324/9781315808383. ISBN 0789034786. OCLC 70775707.
- Dougher, Michael J. (Fall 2002). "This is not B. F. Skinner's behavior analysis: a review of Hayes, Strosahl, And Wilson's Acceptance and Commitment Therapy". Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis. 35 (3): 323–336 (323). doi:10.1901/jaba.2002.35-323. PMC 1284396.
Instead of the familiar litany of behavior analytic-terms and concepts, this book is replete with terms and themes that are more commonly associated with such philosophical and therapeutic traditions as existentialism, humanism, Zen Buddhism, Gestalt, and other experiential-based therapies.
- Hofmann, Stefan G. (December 2008). "Acceptance and commitment therapy: new wave or Morita therapy?". Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice. 15 (4): 280–285 (280–281). doi:10.1111/j.1468-2850.2008.00138.x.
the criticism offered by ACT against CBT is based on a misrepresentation of the empirical evidence. Moreover, the strategies of ACT are not specific to the theory and philosophy underlying ACT. There are considerable similarities between ACT and Eastern holistic approaches, such as Morita therapy, which was developed 80 years ago. ... According to Hayes and colleagues, the principal goal of ACT is to "treat emotional avoidance, excessive literal response to cognitive content, and the inability to make and keep commitments to behavior change" (Kohlenberg, Hayes, & Tsai, 1995, p. 584). This appears to be consistent with many old humanistic therapies and holistic approaches, such as Gestalt therapy (e.g., Perls, Hefferline, & Goodman, 1951). Particularly striking is the similarity between ACT and Morita therapy (Morita, 1928; translated in English in 1998).
- Steven C. Hayes – Interview about ACT (Video). Los Mochis, Sinaloa, Mexico: Centro Integral de Psicología. 24 July 2017. Event occurs at 18:21. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved 5 August 2021 – via YouTube.
I would have to say a lot of what's in ACT is in Gestalt, is in Est, is in mindfulness-based traditions, but I'm not embarrassed by that; I think it's to be expected that things like the wisdom traditions, spiritual traditions, human potential/growth traditions, Gestalt, these things were there because very very creative people put them there. ... The history of psychology would be different if people realized that there was a lot of overlap in the early days between these things that then get put behind walls and students start fighting about and saying, oh, this is very different than that.
- Hayes, Steven C.; Strosahl, Kirk; Wilson, Kelly G. (1999). Acceptance and commitment therapy: an experiential approach to behavior change (1st ed.). New York: Guilford Press. p. 15. ISBN 1572304812. OCLC 41712470.
- Wilson, Kelly G.; Hayes, Steven C.; Byrd, Michelle R. (2000). "Exploring Compatibilities Between Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and 12-Step Treatment for Substance Abuse". Journal of Rational-Emotive and Cognitive-Behavior Therapy. 18 (4): 209–234. doi:10.1023/A:1007835106007. S2CID 54635502.
- Prochaska, James O.; Norcross, John C. (2018). Systems of psychotherapy: a transtheoretical analysis (9th ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 283–285. ISBN 9780190880415. OCLC 1015276003.
- "Research-Supported Psychological Treatments | Society of Clinical Psychology". 11 July 2014. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- Coyne, James C. (22 October 2012). "Troubles in the branding of psychotherapies as 'evidence supported'". plos.org. PLOS. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
- O'Donohue, William; Snipes, Cassandra; Soto, Cyndy (March 2016). "The design, manufacture, and reporting of weak and pseudo-tests: the case of ACT". Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy. 46 (1): 37–40. doi:10.1007/s10879-015-9316-1. S2CID 33176278.
- Kanter, Jonathan W. (June 2013). "The vision of a progressive clinical science to guide clinical practice". Behavior Therapy. 44 (2): 228–233. doi:10.1016/j.beth.2010.07.006. PMID 23611073.
- Herbert, James D.; Forman, Evan M. (June 2013). "Caution: the differences between CT and ACT may be larger (and smaller) than they appear". Behavior Therapy. 44 (2): 218–223. doi:10.1016/j.beth.2009.09.005. PMID 23611071.
- Forman, Evan M.; Shaw, Jena A.; Goetter, Elizabeth M.; Herbert, James D.; Park, Jennie A.; Yuen, Erica K. (December 2012). "Long-term follow-up of a randomized controlled trial comparing acceptance and commitment therapy and standard cognitive behavior therapy for anxiety and depression". Behavior Therapy. 43 (4): 801–811. doi:10.1016/j.beth.2012.04.004. PMID 23046782.
- Routier, Cédric P. (2007). "Relational frame theory (RFT) and acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT): Emperor's tailors or knights of the holy grail?". Acta Comportamentalia. 15 (3): 45–69.
External links
- Contextualscience.org – Home for the Association for Contextual Behavioral Science, a professional organization dedicated to ACT, RFT, and functional contextualism. Also helpful for training opportunities for professionals interested in ACT and RFT. Most ACT workshops worldwide are listed here.
Acceptance and commitment therapy ACT typically pronounced as the word act is a form of psychotherapy as well as a branch of clinical behavior analysis It is an empirically based psychological intervention that uses acceptance and mindfulness strategies along with commitment and behavior change strategies to increase psychological flexibility Acceptance and commitment therapyMeSHD064869 edit on Wikidata This approach was first called comprehensive distancing Steven C Hayes developed it around 1982 to integrate features of cognitive therapy and behavior analysis especially behavior analytic data on the often negative effects of verbal rules and how they might be ameliorated ACT protocols vary with the target behavior and the setting For example in behavioral health a brief version of ACT is focused acceptance and commitment therapy FACT The goal of ACT is not to eliminate difficult feelings but to be present with what life brings and to move toward valued behavior 240 Acceptance and commitment therapy invites people to open up to unpleasant feelings not to overreact to them and not to avoid situations that cause them Its therapeutic effect aims to be a positive spiral in which more understanding of one s emotions leads to a better understanding of the truth In ACT truth is measured through the concept of workability or what works to take another step toward what matters e g values meaning TechniqueBasics ACT is developed within a pragmatic philosophy functional contextualism ACT is based on relational frame theory RFT a comprehensive theory of language and cognition that is derived from behavior analysis Both ACT and RFT are based on B F Skinner s philosophy of radical behaviorism ACT differs from some kinds of cognitive behavioral therapy CBT in that rather than try to teach people to control their thoughts feelings sensations memories and other private events ACT teaches them to just notice accept and embrace their private events especially previously unwanted ones ACT helps the individual get in contact with a transcendent sense of self self as context the one who is always there observing and experiencing and yet distinct from one s thoughts feelings sensations and memories ACT tries to help the individual clarify values and then use them as the basis for action bringing more vitality and meaning to life in the process while increasing psychological flexibility While Western psychology has typically operated under the healthy normality assumption which states that humans naturally are psychologically healthy ACT assumes that the psychological processes of a normal human mind are often destructive The core conception of ACT is that psychological suffering is usually caused by experiential avoidance cognitive entanglement and resulting psychological rigidity that leads to a failure to take needed behavioral steps in accord with core values As a simple way to summarize the model ACT views the core of many problems to be due to the concepts represented in the acronym FEAR Fusion with your thoughts Evaluation of experience Avoidance of your experience Reason giving for your behavior And the healthy alternative is to ACT Accept your thoughts and emotions Choose a valued direction Take actionCore principles ACT commonly employs six core principles to help clients develop psychological flexibility Cognitive defusion Learning methods to reduce the tendency to reify thoughts images emotions and memories Acceptance Allowing unwanted private experiences thoughts feelings and urges to come and go without struggling with them Contact with the present moment Awareness of the here and now experienced with openness interest and receptiveness e g mindfulness The observing self Accessing a transcendent sense of self a continuity of consciousness which is unchanging Values Discovering what is most important to oneself Committed action Setting goals according to values and carrying them out responsibly in the service of a meaningful life Correlational evidence has found that absence of psychological flexibility predicts many forms of psychopathology A 2005 meta analysis showed that the six ACT principles on average account for 16 29 of the variance in psychopathology general mental health depression anxiety at baseline depending on the measure using correlational methods 12 13 A 2012 meta analysis of 68 laboratory based studies on ACT components has also provided support for the link between psychological flexibility concepts and specific components ResearchThe website of the Association for Contextual Behavioral Science states that there were over 1 100 randomized controlled trials RCTs of ACT over 500 meta analyses systematic reviews and 84 mediational studies of the ACT literature as of June 2024 Organizations that have stated that acceptance and commitment therapy is empirically supported in certain areas or as a whole according to their standards include as of March 2022 Society of Clinical Psychology American Psychological Association APA Division 12 World Health Organization UK National Institute for Health and Care Excellence Australian Psychological Society Netherlands Institute of Psychologists Sections of Neuropsychology and Rehabilitation Netherlands National Institute for Public Health and the Environment RIVM Sweden Association of Physiotherapists SAMHSA s National Registry of Evidence based Programs and Practices California Evidence Based Clearinghouse for Child Welfare U S Department of Veterans Affairs Department of Defense US Department of Justice Office of Justice Programs Washington State Institute for Public Policy American Headache SocietyHistory In 2006 only about 30 randomized clinical trials and controlled time series evaluating ACT were known in 2011 the number had doubled to more than 60 ACT randomized controlled trials and in 2023 there were more than 1 000 randomized controlled trials of ACT worldwide A 2008 meta analysis concluded that the evidence was still too limited for ACT to be considered a supported treatment A 2009 meta analysis found that ACT was more effective than placebo and treatment as usual for most problems A 2012 meta analysis was more positive and reported that ACT outperformed CBT except for treating depression and anxiety A 2015 review found that ACT was better than placebo and typical treatment for anxiety disorders depression and addiction Its effectiveness was similar to traditional treatments like cognitive behavioral therapy CBT The authors also noted that research methodologies had improved since the studies described in the 2008 meta analysis In 2020 a review of meta analyses examined 20 meta analyses that included 133 studies and 12 477 participants The authors concluded ACT is efficacious for all conditions examined including anxiety depression substance use pain and transdiagnostic groups Results also showed that ACT was generally superior to inactive controls treatment as usual and most active intervention conditions In 2020 2021 after three RCTs of ACT by the World Health Organization WHO WHO released an ACT based self help course Self Help Plus SH for groups of up to 30 people who have lived through or are living through adversity As of July 2023 there are six RCTs of Self Help Plus In 2022 a systematic review of meta analyses about interventions for depressive symptoms in people living with chronic pain concluded Acceptance and commitment therapy for general chronic pain and fluoxetine and web based psychotherapy for fibromyalgia showed the most robust effects and can be prioritized for implementation in clinical practice Professional organizationsThe Association for Contextual Behavioral Science is committed to research and development in the area of ACT RFT and contextual behavioral science more generally As of 2023 it had over 8 000 members worldwide about half outside of the United States It holds annual world conference meetings each summer with the location alternating between North America Europe and South America The Association for Behavior Analysis International ABAI has a special interest group for practitioner issues behavioral counseling and clinical behavior analysis ABA I ABAI has larger special interest groups for autism and behavioral medicine ABAI serves as the core intellectual home for behavior analysts ABAI sponsors three conferences year one multi track in the U S one specific to autism and one international The Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies ABCT also has an interest group in behavior analysis which focuses on clinical behavior analysis ACT work is commonly presented at ABCT and other mainstream CBT organizations The British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies BABCP has a large special interest group in ACT with over 1 200 members Doctoral level behavior analysts who are psychologists belong to the American Psychological Association s APA Division 25 Behavior analysis ACT has been called a commonly used treatment with empirical support within the APA recognized specialty of behavioral and cognitive psychology SimilaritiesACT dialectical behavior therapy DBT functional analytic psychotherapy FAP mindfulness based cognitive therapy MBCT and other acceptance and mindfulness based approaches have been grouped by Steven Hayes under the name the third wave of cognitive behavior therapy However this classification has been criticized and not everyone agrees with it For example David Dozois and Aaron T Beck argued that there is no new wave and that there are a variety of extensions of cognitive therapy for example Jeffrey Young s schema therapy came after Beck s cognitive therapy but Young did not name his innovations the third wave or the third generation of cognitive behavior therapy According to Hayes classification the first wave behaviour therapy commenced in the 1920s based on Pavlov s classical respondent conditioning and operant conditioning that was correlated to reinforcing consequences The second wave emerged in the 1970s and included cognition in the form of irrational beliefs dysfunctional attitudes or depressogenic attributions page needed In the late 1980s empirical limitations and philosophical misgivings of the second wave gave rise to Steven Hayes ACT theory which modified the focus of abnormal behaviour away from the content or form towards the context in which it occurs page needed People s rigid ideas about themselves their lack of focus on what is important in their life and their struggle to change sensations feelings or thoughts that are troublesome only serve to create greater distress Steven C Hayes described the third wave in his ABCT President Address as follows Grounded in an empirical principle focused approach the third wave of behavioral and cognitive therapy is particularly sensitive to the context and functions of psychological phenomena not just their form and thus tends to emphasize contextual and experiential change strategies in addition to more direct and didactic ones These treatments tend to seek the construction of broad flexible and effective repertoires over an eliminative approach to narrowly defined problems and to emphasize the relevance of the issues they examine for clinicians as well as clients The third wave reformulates and synthesizes previous generations of behavioral and cognitive therapy and carries them forward into questions issues and domains previously addressed primarily by other traditions in hopes of improving both understanding and outcomes ACT has also been adapted to create a non therapy version of the same processes called acceptance and commitment training This training process oriented towards the development of mindfulness acceptance and valued skills in non clinical settings such as businesses or schools has also been investigated in a handful of research studies with good preliminary results page needed The emphasis of ACT on ongoing present moment awareness valued directions and committed action is similar to other psychotherapeutic approaches that unlike ACT are not as focused on outcome research or consciously linked to a basic behavioral science program including approaches such as Gestalt therapy Morita therapy and others Hayes and colleagues themselves stated in their book that introduced ACT that many or even most of the techniques in ACT have been borrowed from elsewhere from the human potential movement Eastern traditions behavior therapy mystical traditions and the like Wilson Hayes amp Byrd explored at length the compatibilities between ACT and the 12 step treatment of addictions and argued that unlike most other psychotherapies both approaches can be implicitly or explicitly integrated due to their broad commonalities Both approaches endorse acceptance as an alternative to unproductive control ACT emphasizes the hopelessness of relying on ineffectual strategies to control private experience similarly the 12 step approach emphasizes the acceptance of powerlessness over addiction Both approaches encourage a broad life reorientation rather than a narrow focus on the elimination of substance use and both place great value on the long term project of building of a meaningful life aligned with the clients values ACT and 12 step both encourage the pragmatic utility of cultivating a transcendent sense of self higher power within an unconventional individualized spirituality Finally they both openly accept the paradox that acceptance is a necessary condition for change and both encourage a playful awareness of the limitations of human thinking CriticismThe textbook Systems of Psychotherapy A Transtheoretical Analysis includes various criticisms of third wave behaviour therapy including ACT from the perspectives of other systems of psychotherapy including the complaint that third wave therapies display an annoying tendency to gather effective methods from other traditions and label them as their own Evidence based practice In a 2012 blog post psychologist James C Coyne criticized the process and studies initially used by the APA to favorably evaluate ACT for the treatment of psychosis in its labeling system for evidence based medicine In particular it relied on only one full randomized trial supplemented by a pilot study and a feasibility study despite the criteria for strong evidence requiring a treatment to be supported by many such trials The main study used Bach and Hayes 2002 was alleged not to have clearly specified its hypothesis that ACT reduces rehospitalization in advance of the conducted analysis a practice in which researchers retrospectively cherry pick the metric showing the largest claim supporting change post treatment In 2016 this and other critiques were cited by William O Donohue and co authors in a paper on ACT weak and pseudo tests adding that while no doubt there are studies of ACT that are quite good they had examined three trials of ACT that were weakened and thus made easier to pass and they listed over 30 ways in which such trials were weak or pseudo tests Drawing on concepts from Karl Popper s philosophy of science and Popper s critique of psychoanalysis as impossible to falsify O Donohue and colleagues advocated Popperian severe testing instead Excessive promotion over other therapies In 2013 psychologist Jonathan W Kanter said that Hayes and colleagues argue that empirical clinical psychology is hampered in its efforts to alleviate human suffering and present contextual behavioral science CBS to address the basic philosophical theoretical and methodological shortcomings of the field CBS represents a host of good ideas but at times the promise of CBS is obscured by excessive promotion of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy ACT and Relational Frame Theory RFT and demotion of earlier cognitive and behavior change techniques in the absence of clear logic and empirical support Nevertheless Kanter concluded that the ideas of CBS RFT and ACT deserve serious consideration by the mainstream community and have great potential to shape a truly progressive clinical science to guide clinical practice Authors of a 2013 paper comparing ACT to cognitive therapy CT concluded that although preliminary research on ACT is promising we suggest that its proponents need to be appropriately humble in their claims In particular like CT ACT cannot yet make strong claims that its unique and theory driven intervention components are active ingredients in its effects The authors of the paper suggested that many of the assumptions of ACT and CT are pre analytical and cannot be directly pitted against one another in experimental tests In 2012 ACT appeared to be about as effective as standard CBT with some meta analyses showing small differences in favor of ACT and others not For example a meta analysis published by Francisco Ruiz in 2012 looked at 16 studies comparing ACT to standard CBT ACT failed to separate from CBT on effect sizes for anxiety however modest benefits were found with ACT compared to CBT for depression and quality of life The author found a separation between ACT and CBT on the primary outcome a heterogeneous class of 14 separate outcome measures aggregated into the effect size analysis However the study is limited by the highly heterogeneous nature of the outcome variables used in the analysis which tends to increase the number needed to treat NNT to replicate the effect size reported More limited measures such as depression anxiety and quality of life decrease the NNT making the analysis more clinically relevant and on these measures ACT did not outperform CBT A 2012 clinical trial by Forman et al found that Beckian CBT obtained better results than ACT Several theoretical and empirical concerns have arisen in response to the ascendancy of ACT One theoretical concern was that ACT s primary authors and the corresponding theories of human behavior relational frame theory RFT and functional contextualism FC recommended their approach as the proverbial holy grail of psychological therapies In 2012 in the preface to the second edition of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy the primary authors of ACT clarified that ACT has not been created to undercut the traditions from which it came nor does it claim to be a panacea x See alsoBehavioral psychotherapy Contextualism Decisional balance sheet Four square tool Defence mechanism Humanistic psychology Positive psychology Solution focused brief therapyReferencesPlumb Jennifer C Stewart Ian Dahl Joanne Lundgren Tobias Spring 2009 In search of meaning values in modern clinical behavior analysis The Behavior Analyst 32 1 85 103 doi 10 1007 BF03392177 PMC 2686995 PMID 22478515 Hayes Steven C Acceptance amp Commitment Therapy ACT ContextualPsychology org Zettle Robert D 2005 The evolution of a contextual approach to therapy from comprehensive distancing to ACT International Journal of Behavioral Consultation and Therapy 1 2 77 89 doi 10 1037 h0100736 Waltz Thomas J Hayes Steven C 2010 Acceptance and Commitment Therapy In Kazantzis Nikolaos Reinecke Mark A Freeman Arthur eds Cognitive and Behavioral Theories in Clinical Practice New York Guilford Press pp 155 156 ISBN 978 1 60623 342 9 OCLC 317927326 Focused Acceptance and Commitment Therapy FACT Mastering The Basics contextualscience org Association for Contextual Behavioral Science Archived from the original on 2016 04 07 Retrieved 2016 04 07 Hayes Stephen C Strosahl Kirk D Wilson Kelly G 2012 Acceptance and Commitment Therapy The Process and Practice of Mindful Change 2nd ed Guilford Press ISBN 9781609189624 OCLC 713181786 Shpancer Noam September 8 2010 Emotional Acceptance Why Feeling Bad is Good Psychology Today blogs Kohlenberg Robert Hayes Steven Tsai Mavis 1993 Radical behavioral psychotherapy two contemporary examples Clinical Psychology Review 13 6 579 592 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 542 4819 doi 10 1016 0272 7358 93 90047 p Harris Russ August 2006 Embracing your demons an overview of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy PDF Psychotherapy in Australia 12 4 2 8 Cookson Camilla Luzon Olga Newland John Kingston Jessica September 2020 Examining the role of cognitive fusion and experiential avoidance in predicting anxiety and depression Psychology and Psychotherapy 93 3 456 473 doi 10 1111 papt 12233 ISSN 2044 8341 PMID 30994261 S2CID 119535460 Powers Mark B Zum Vorde Sive Vording Maarten B Emmelkamp Paul M G 2009 Acceptance and commitment therapy a meta analytic review Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics 78 2 73 80 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 476 7775 doi 10 1159 000190790 ISSN 0033 3190 PMID 19142046 S2CID 5916829 Robb Hank 2007 Values as Leading Principles in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy International Journal of Behavioral Consultation and Therapy 3 1 118 23 doi 10 1037 h0100170 Hayes Steven C Luoma Jason B Bond Frank W Masuda Akihiko Lillis Jason 2006 Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Model processes and outcomes Behaviour Research and Therapy 44 1 1 25 doi 10 1016 j brat 2005 06 006 PMID 16300724 Levin Michael E Hildebrandt Mikaela J Lillis Jason Hayes Steven C 2012 The Impact of Treatment Components Suggested by the Psychological Flexibility Model A Meta Analysis of Laboratory Based Component Studies Behavior Therapy 43 4 741 56 doi 10 1016 j beth 2012 05 003 PMID 23046777 ACT Randomized Controlled Trials 1986 to present contextualscience org Association for Contextual Behavioral Science Retrieved 2024 05 28 State of the ACT Evidence contextualscience org Association for Contextual Behavioral Science Retrieved 2024 05 07 Ruiz F J 2010 A review of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy ACT empirical evidence Correlational experimental psychopathology component and outcome studies International Journal of Psychology and Psychological Therapy 10 1 125 62 Ost Lars Goran 2008 Efficacy of the third wave of behavioral therapies A systematic review and meta analysis Behaviour Research and Therapy 46 3 296 321 doi 10 1016 j brat 2007 12 005 PMID 18258216 Ruiz Jimenez Francisco Jose 2012 Acceptance and commitment therapy versus traditional cognitive behavioral therapy A systematic review and meta analysis of current empirical evidence PDF International Journal of Psychology and Psychological Therapy 12 3 333 358 A Tjak Jacqueline G L Davis Michelle L Morina Nexhmedin Powers Mark B Smits Jasper A J Emmelkamp Paul M G 2015 A meta analysis of the efficacy of acceptance and commitment therapy for clinically relevant mental and physical health problems PDF Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics 84 1 30 36 doi 10 1159 000365764 PMID 25547522 S2CID 215537860 Gloster Andrew T Walder Noemi Levin Michael E Twohig Michael P Karekla Maria 2020 The Empirical Status of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy A Review of Meta analyses Journal of Contextual Behavioral Science 18 181 192 Bibcode 2020JCBS 18 181G doi 10 1016 j jcbs 2020 09 009 S2CID 224928250 New stress management course for people living with adversity www who int World Health Organization 11 October 2021 Retrieved 2022 03 30 See also the course materials Doing What Matters in Times of Stress www who int World Health Organization Retrieved 2022 03 30 Mediavilla Roberto 2023 Effectiveness of a mental health stepped care programme for healthcare workers with psychological distress in crisis settings a multicentre randomised controlled trial 26 1 e300697 doi 10 1136 bmjment 2023 300697 PMC 10254812 PMID 37263708 S2CID 259024864 Cheng Darren K Lai Ka Sing Paris Pico Espinosa Oscar Javier Rice Danielle B Chung Chadwick Modarresi Golale Sud Abhimanyu 2022 Interventions for depressive symptoms in people living with chronic pain a systematic review of meta analyses Pain Medicine 23 5 934 954 doi 10 1093 pm pnab248 PMC 9071227 PMID 34373915 Conferences Association for Contextual Behavioral Science Retrieved 2017 11 07 Special Interest Groups Association for Behavior Analysis International www abainternational org Retrieved 2022 03 09 Twyman J S 2007 A new era of science and practice in behavior analysis Association for Behavior Analysis International Newsletter 30 3 1 4 Hassert Derrick L Kelly Amanda N Pritchard Joshua K Cautilli Joseph D 2008 The Licensing of Behavior Analysts Protecting the Profession and the Public Journal of Early and Intensive Behavior Intervention 5 2 8 19 doi 10 1037 h0100415 About the Behavior Analysis Division apadivisions org American Psychological Association Retrieved 2018 08 07 Behavioral and Cognitive Psychology Public Description apa org American Psychological Association Retrieved 2018 08 07 Martell Christopher R Michael E Addis Neil S Jacobson 2001 Depression in Context Strategies for Guided Action New York W W Norton p 197 ISBN 978 0 393 70350 4 Hofmann Stefan G Asmundson Gordon J G 2008 Acceptance and mindfulness based therapy New wave or old hat Clinical Psychology Review 28 1 1 16 doi 10 1016 j cpr 2007 09 003 PMID 17904260 Dozois David J A Beck Aaron T 2011 Cognitive therapy In Herbert James D Forman Evan M eds Acceptance and mindfulness in cognitive behavior therapy understanding and applying the new therapies Hoboken NJ John Wiley amp Sons pp 26 56 37 doi 10 1002 9781118001851 ch2 ISBN 9780470474419 OCLC 612189071 Though mindfulness and acceptance based strategies have not been emphasized in cognitive therapy relative to cognitive change interventions their general approaches are not inconsistent with the cognitive model and the approaches are in many respects more similar than distinct Congruent with this argument we view these approaches as extensions or complementary components of cognitive therapy and not a third wave per se see Hofmann 2008a Hofmann amp Asmundson 2008 Leahy Robert L ed 2004 Contemporary cognitive therapy theory research and practice New York Guilford Press ISBN 159385062X OCLC 55228722 Hayes Steven C Smith Spencer Xavier 2005 Get out of your mind amp into your life the new acceptance amp commitment therapy A New Harbinger self help workbook Oakland CA New Harbinger Publications ISBN 9781572244252 OCLC 61229775 Hayes Steven C September 2004 Acceptance and commitment therapy relational frame theory and the third wave of behavioral and cognitive therapies PDF Behavior Therapy 35 4 639 665 658 doi 10 1016 S0005 7894 04 80013 3 Hayes Steven C Bond Frank W Barnes Holmes Dermot Austin John eds 2006 Acceptance and mindfulness at work applying acceptance and commitment therapy and relational frame theory to organizational behavior management New York Haworth Press doi 10 4324 9781315808383 ISBN 0789034786 OCLC 70775707 Dougher Michael J Fall 2002 This is not B F Skinner s behavior analysis a review of Hayes Strosahl And Wilson s Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis 35 3 323 336 323 doi 10 1901 jaba 2002 35 323 PMC 1284396 Instead of the familiar litany of behavior analytic terms and concepts this book is replete with terms and themes that are more commonly associated with such philosophical and therapeutic traditions as existentialism humanism Zen Buddhism Gestalt and other experiential based therapies Hofmann Stefan G December 2008 Acceptance and commitment therapy new wave or Morita therapy Clinical Psychology Science and Practice 15 4 280 285 280 281 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2850 2008 00138 x the criticism offered by ACT against CBT is based on a misrepresentation of the empirical evidence Moreover the strategies of ACT are not specific to the theory and philosophy underlying ACT There are considerable similarities between ACT and Eastern holistic approaches such as Morita therapy which was developed 80 years ago According to Hayes and colleagues the principal goal of ACT is to treat emotional avoidance excessive literal response to cognitive content and the inability to make and keep commitments to behavior change Kohlenberg Hayes amp Tsai 1995 p 584 This appears to be consistent with many old humanistic therapies and holistic approaches such as Gestalt therapy e g Perls Hefferline amp Goodman 1951 Particularly striking is the similarity between ACT and Morita therapy Morita 1928 translated in English in 1998 Steven C Hayes Interview about ACT Video Los Mochis Sinaloa Mexico Centro Integral de Psicologia 24 July 2017 Event occurs at 18 21 Archived from the original on 2021 12 21 Retrieved 5 August 2021 via YouTube I would have to say a lot of what s in ACT is in Gestalt is in Est is in mindfulness based traditions but I m not embarrassed by that I think it s to be expected that things like the wisdom traditions spiritual traditions human potential growth traditions Gestalt these things were there because very very creative people put them there The history of psychology would be different if people realized that there was a lot of overlap in the early days between these things that then get put behind walls and students start fighting about and saying oh this is very different than that Hayes Steven C Strosahl Kirk Wilson Kelly G 1999 Acceptance and commitment therapy an experiential approach to behavior change 1st ed New York Guilford Press p 15 ISBN 1572304812 OCLC 41712470 Wilson Kelly G Hayes Steven C Byrd Michelle R 2000 Exploring Compatibilities Between Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and 12 Step Treatment for Substance Abuse Journal of Rational Emotive and Cognitive Behavior Therapy 18 4 209 234 doi 10 1023 A 1007835106007 S2CID 54635502 Prochaska James O Norcross John C 2018 Systems of psychotherapy a transtheoretical analysis 9th ed New York Oxford University Press pp 283 285 ISBN 9780190880415 OCLC 1015276003 Research Supported Psychological Treatments Society of Clinical Psychology 11 July 2014 Retrieved 29 March 2024 Coyne James C 22 October 2012 Troubles in the branding of psychotherapies as evidence supported plos org PLOS Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 4 May 2016 O Donohue William Snipes Cassandra Soto Cyndy March 2016 The design manufacture and reporting of weak and pseudo tests the case of ACT Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy 46 1 37 40 doi 10 1007 s10879 015 9316 1 S2CID 33176278 Kanter Jonathan W June 2013 The vision of a progressive clinical science to guide clinical practice Behavior Therapy 44 2 228 233 doi 10 1016 j beth 2010 07 006 PMID 23611073 Herbert James D Forman Evan M June 2013 Caution the differences between CT and ACT may be larger and smaller than they appear Behavior Therapy 44 2 218 223 doi 10 1016 j beth 2009 09 005 PMID 23611071 Forman Evan M Shaw Jena A Goetter Elizabeth M Herbert James D Park Jennie A Yuen Erica K December 2012 Long term follow up of a randomized controlled trial comparing acceptance and commitment therapy and standard cognitive behavior therapy for anxiety and depression Behavior Therapy 43 4 801 811 doi 10 1016 j beth 2012 04 004 PMID 23046782 Routier Cedric P 2007 Relational frame theory RFT and acceptance and commitment therapy ACT Emperor s tailors or knights of the holy grail Acta Comportamentalia 15 3 45 69 External linksContextualscience org Home for the Association for Contextual Behavioral Science a professional organization dedicated to ACT RFT and functional contextualism Also helpful for training opportunities for professionals interested in ACT and RFT Most ACT workshops worldwide are listed here