Literature DB >> 35936292

Compassion Focused Group Therapy for People With a Diagnosis of Bipolar Affective Disorder: A Feasibility Study.

Paul Gilbert1,2, Jaskaran K Basran1,2, Joanne Raven2, Hannah Gilbert2,3, Nicola Petrocchi4,5, Simone Cheli6, Andrew Rayner2, Alison Hayes7, Kate Lucre7, Paschalina Minou8,9, David Giles10, Frances Byrne7, Elizabeth Newton9, Kirsten McEwan7.   

Abstract

Background: Compassion focused therapy (CFT) is an evolutionary informed, biopsychosocial approach to mental health problems and therapy. It suggests that evolved motives (e.g., for caring, cooperating, competing) are major sources for the organisation of psychophysiological processes which underpin mental health problems. Hence, evolved motives can be targets for psychotherapy. People with certain types of depression are psychophysiologically orientated towards social competition and concerned with social status and social rank. These can give rise to down rank-focused forms of social comparison, sense of inferiority, worthlessness, lowered confidence, submissive behaviour, shame proneness and self-criticism. People with bipolar disorders also experience elevated aspects of competitiveness and up rank status evaluation. These shift processing to a sense of superiority, elevated confidence, energised behaviour, positive affect and social dominance. This is the first study to explore the feasibility of a 12 module CFT group, tailored to helping people with a diagnosis of bipolar disorder understand the impact of evolved competitive, status-regulating motivation on their mental states and the value of cultivating caring and compassion motives and their psychophysiological regulators.
Methods: Six participants with a history of bipolar disorder took part in a CFT group consisting of 12 modules (over 25 sessions) as co-collaborators to explore their personal experiences of CFT and potential processes of change. Assessment of change was measured via self-report, heart rate variability (HRV) and focus groups over three time points.
Results: Although changes in self-report scales between participants and across time were uneven, four of the six participants consistently showed improvements across the majority of self-report measures. Heart rate variability measures revealed significant improvement over the course of the therapy. Qualitative data from three focus groups revealed participants found CFT gave them helpful insight into: how evolution has given rise to a number of difficult problems for emotion regulation (called tricky brain) which is not one's fault; an evolutionary understanding of the nature of bipolar disorders; development of a compassionate mind and practices of compassion focused visualisations, styles of thinking and behaviours; addressing issues of self-criticism; and building a sense of a compassionate identity as a means of coping with life difficulties. These impacted their emotional regulation and social relationships.
Conclusion: Although small, the study provides evidence of feasibility, acceptability and engagement with CFT. Focus group analysis revealed that participants were able to switch from competitive focused to compassion focused processing with consequent improvements in mental states and social behaviour. Participants indicated a journey over time from 'intellectually' understanding the process of building a compassionate mind to experiencing a more embodied sense of compassion that had significant impacts on their orientation to (and working with) the psychophysiological processes of bipolar disorder.
Copyright © 2022 Gilbert, Basran, Raven, Gilbert, Petrocchi, Cheli, Rayner, Hayes, Lucre, Minou, Giles, Byrne, Newton and McEwan.

Entities:  

Keywords:  biopsychosocial; bipolar; caring; compassion focused therapy; competitiveness; heart rate variability

Year:  2022        PMID: 35936292      PMCID: PMC9347420          DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.841932

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Front Psychol        ISSN: 1664-1078


  119 in total

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Journal:  Clin Psychol Rev       Date:  2005-09-12

Review 2.  Winning and losing: an evolutionary approach to mood disorders and their therapy.

Authors:  Leon Sloman; Edward D Sturman; John S Price
Journal:  Can J Psychiatry       Date:  2011-06       Impact factor: 4.356

3.  Playing the manic game. Interpersonal maneuvers of the acutely manic patient.

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4.  Feasibility and acceptability of integrated psychological therapy versus treatment as usual for people with bipolar disorder and co-morbid alcohol use: A single blind randomised controlled trial.

Authors:  Steven H Jones; Lisa Riste; Heather Robinson; Fiona Holland; Sarah Peters; Rosalyn Hartwell; Katherine Berry; Mike Fitzsimmons; Ian Wilson; Claire Hilton; Rita Long; Lucy Bateman; Emma Weymouth; Rebecca Owen; Chris Roberts; Christine Barrowclough
Journal:  J Affect Disord       Date:  2019-05-29       Impact factor: 4.839

5.  The Reciprocal Relationship between Bipolar Disorder and Social Interaction: A Qualitative Investigation.

Authors:  Rebecca Owen; Patricia Gooding; Robert Dempsey; Steven Jones
Journal:  Clin Psychol Psychother       Date:  2016-11-13

Review 6.  Depression sum-scores don't add up: why analyzing specific depression symptoms is essential.

Authors:  Eiko I Fried; Randolph M Nesse
Journal:  BMC Med       Date:  2015-04-06       Impact factor: 8.775

Review 7.  The Oxytocin-Vasopressin Pathway in the Context of Love and Fear.

Authors:  C Sue Carter
Journal:  Front Endocrinol (Lausanne)       Date:  2017-12-22       Impact factor: 5.555

Review 8.  Heart Rate Variability and Cardiac Vagal Tone in Psychophysiological Research - Recommendations for Experiment Planning, Data Analysis, and Data Reporting.

Authors:  Sylvain Laborde; Emma Mosley; Julian F Thayer
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2017-02-20

9.  Factorial Designs Help to Understand How Psychological Therapy Works.

Authors:  Edward R Watkins; Alexandra Newbold
Journal:  Front Psychiatry       Date:  2020-05-14       Impact factor: 4.157

Review 10.  Putting the "mental" back in "mental disorders": a perspective from research on fear and anxiety.

Authors:  Vincent Taschereau-Dumouchel; Matthias Michel; Hakwan Lau; Stefan G Hofmann; Joseph E LeDoux
Journal:  Mol Psychiatry       Date:  2022-01-26       Impact factor: 13.437

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