| Literature DB >> 28146108 |
Melissa Pielech1, Kevin E Vowles2, Rikard Wicksell3.
Abstract
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) is a third wave behavior therapy approach which aims to increase engagement in activities that bring meaning, vitality, and value to the lives of individuals experiencing persistent pain, discomfort, or distress. This goal is particularly relevant when these aversive experiences cannot be effectively avoided or when avoidance efforts risk their exacerbation, all of which may be common experiences in children and adolescents with chronic pain conditions. The primary aim of the present paper is to review and summarize the extant literature on the application, utility, and evidence for using ACT with pediatric chronic pain populations by: (1) defining the theoretical assumptions of the ACT model; (2) summarizing research study findings and relevant measures from the published literature; and (3) critically discussing the strengths, limitations and areas in need of further development.Entities:
Keywords: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy; ACT; adolescents; children; chronic pain; pain acceptance; pediatric
Year: 2017 PMID: 28146108 PMCID: PMC5332912 DOI: 10.3390/children4020010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Children (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9067
Measures of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) processes in pediatric chronic pain.
| Measures | Description | Relations |
|---|---|---|
| Chronic Pain Acceptance Questionnaire: Adolescent version (CPAQ-A; [ | 20 item self-report measure, adapted from the adult version [ | Correlated with disability, depression, anxiety, self-efficacy. Not correlated with pain-specific variables (e.g., pain duration). |
| Child and Adolescent Mindfulness Measure (CAMM; [ | 10 item measure of mindfulness skills. Normed on four samples of school age children and adolescents. Response options range from (0) | Correlated with quality of life, school and social functioning and mindfulness-inconsistent processes (e.g., externalizing behavior). |
| Avoidance and Fusion Questionnaire for Youth (AFQ-Y; [ | 17 item measure of psychological inflexibility for youth. There is also a validated eight-item short form of the AFQ-Y. | Scores for both versions correlated with child anxiety, somatic complaints, mindfulness, quality of life, and scholastic functioning. |
| Parent psychological flexibility measure (PPFQ; [ | 24 item measure to assess parental levels of psychological flexibility in responses to child’s pain symptoms. Items range from (0) | Scores correlated with child disability, depression, and pain acceptance, as well as with parental response behaviors, as assessed by the Adult Responses to Child Symptoms (ARCS) measure [ |
| Chronic Pain Acceptance Questionnaire: Parent report (CPAQ-P; [ | 16 item self-report measure of parent perceptions of child’s acceptance of pain, adapted from the adult CPAQ [ | Scores correlated with child pain intensity and disability, as well as parent pain catastrophizing, pain-related fear, and maladaptive protective responses. |
| Parent Pain Acceptance Questionnaire (PPAQ; [ | 15 item self-report measure of parent’s own levels of acceptance towards their child’s pain. Adapted from the CPAQ-P [ | Scores correlated with child pain acceptance, pain-related fear, and pain catastrophizing, as well as parental maladaptive responses to pain and pain catastrophizing |
| Parental Acceptance and Action Questionnaire (PAAQ [ | 15 item self-report measure of experiential avoidance in relation to parenting. Two subscales: (1) Inaction and (2) Unwillingness | In preliminary validation, the PAAQ correlated with symptoms of child psychopathology and measures of controlling parental behaviors and affective expression. Predicted significant amounts of variance in parent and clinician ratings of child anxiety symptoms. |
* Not a pain specific ACT measure.