
Psychiatr News December 2, 2005
Volume 40, Number 23, page 48
© 2005 American Psychiatric Association
CBT Variant Helps Patients Cope With Severe Pain
Joan Arehart-Treichel
Accepting pain may help persons with chronic, disabling pain. However,
only a longer-term follow-up will reveal whether this hypothesis is borne
out.
A type of cognitive-behavior therapy (CBT) called contextual cognitive
behavior therapy may help patients with severe, persistent, and disabling
pain, preliminary results published in the October Behaviour Research and
Therapy suggest.
Lance McCracken, Ph.D., of the Pain Management Unit of the University of
Bath in England, and colleagues studied 84 subjects with severely disabling
chronic pain that had lasted for 11 years on average and that had not been
relieved by surgery, opioid analgesics, or antidepressants.
Subjects were given intensive group therapy five days a week, six hours a
day, for three or four weeks.
During this therapy, subjects were taught not only how to recognize pain
sensations and negative thoughts having to do with pain, but to accept them as
well. This approach runs counter to the traditional CBT approach to managing
pain, which consists of first recognizing pain sensations and related negative
thoughts, then trying to change or eliminate them.
An example of how the new approach works is as follows:
An individual in pain might be reluctant to attend a party because he or
she thinks, "I can't attend because I hurt too much, and it's
embarrassing to be around other people when I hurt." The person would be
encouraged to identify this faulty thinking pattern, but then to accept
itin other words, simply "bring the thought along to the
party."
The rationale for this approach is that by accepting pain or a pain-related
thought a person can mitigate its distressing and disabling impact. In fact,
in some studies using experimental lab conditions conducted by other
researchers, acceptance of pain appeared to lead to greater pain tolerance
than did psychological efforts to control pain.
In addition to being trained to accept pain and pain-related thoughts,
subjects also embarked on other kinds of training designed to get them to
tolerate pain and to engage in activity regardless of pain. For instance, they
engaged in sensation-focusing exercises to come to the realization that it is
possible to be active and enjoy life even when one is in pain. They performed
relaxation exercises to increase bodily awareness and to improve productive
functioning. They scrutinized their health habits and chose meaningful
directions to pursue in their lives.
"We integrated the physical therapies, occupational therapies, and
health education so that they worked along the same principles of the
[psychological] treatment," McCracken explained to Psychiatric
News. "In a sense, the whole [package] was contextual
cognitive-behavior therapy, including both acceptance-based and
skills-training methods."
The subjects were assessed with a battery of tests before treatment, after
treatment, and three months later. The tests included the Beck Depression
Inventory, the Pain Anxiety Symptoms Scale, and the Sickness Impact Profile,
all of which are widely used for clinical outcome assessment and in research
with chronic pain sufferers.
The subjects were found to experience significant improvement in emotional,
social, and physical functioning following treatment, compared with their
situations before being treated. For example, they demonstrated an 18 percent
reduction in pain and in pain-related anxiety, a 25 percent reduction in
physical disability, a 39 percent reduction in psychosocial disability, a 41
percent reduction in depression, and a 62 percent reduction in hours of rest
needed daily because of pain.
Moreover, most improvement continued three months after the end of the
therapy. For instance, compared with pretreatment score, the pain score at
follow-up was 11 percent less, and depression was 41 percent less. Also at
follow-up, as compared with pretreatment, analgesic use and physician visits
were significantly reduced.
And as for subjects' Chronic Pain Acceptance Questionnaire scores, they had
been 49 percent on average before the therapy began and were 61 percent on
average at the three-month follow-upa significant difference.
Thus, the psychological and physical improvements that the subjects
experienced throughout the study appeared to be due to their increased
acceptance of pain, McCracken and his group concluded.
McCracken said that his team has nine-month follow-up data, but have not
yet analyzed it.
The study was funded by the Royal National Hospital for Rheumatic Diseases
NHS Trust and the West Virginia University Eberly College of Arts and Sciences
and Office of Academic Affairs.
An abstract of "Acceptance-Based Treatment for Persons With
Complex, Long-Standing Chronic Pain: A Preliminary Analysis of Treatment
Outcome in Comparison to a Waiting Phase" can be accessed at
<www.sciencedirect.com>
by clicking on "Browse A-Z" of journals, then "B,"
then "Behaviour Research and Therapy.">
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