act and obesity

9
121110 1 ACT and obesity S.Weineland Obesity (BMI <30) is resistant to psychological methods of treatment, if anything other than a shortterm perspecGve is taken (Fairburn, 2010). Success is shorttermed and followed by weight regain for the majority of individuals. Focus on…. PrevenGon Environment (toxic food environment)

Upload: nordicacbsforum

Post on 22-Jun-2015

605 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Sandra Weinelands talk at the Nordic ACBS Forum 2012.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: ACT and Obesity

12-­‐11-­‐10  

1  

ACT  and  obesity    S.Weineland    

Obesity  (BMI  <30)  is  resistant  to  psychological  methods  of  treatment,  if  anything  other  than  a  short-­‐term  perspecGve  is  taken  (Fairburn,  2010).  

Success  is  short-­‐termed  and  followed  by  weight  regain  for  the  majority  of  individuals.    

Focus  on….  

•  PrevenGon  •  Environment  (toxic  food  environment)    

Page 2: ACT and Obesity

12-­‐11-­‐10  

2  

Need  for  a  broader  focus  in  psychological  treatment?  

Living  With  the  SGgma  of  Obesity    

•  Obesity  is  associated  with  characterisGcs  such  as  being  lazy,  less  competent,  lacking  self-­‐discipline,  and  being  emoGonally  unstable  (Wang,  Brownell,  &  Wadden,  2004).  

•  SGgmaGzing  experiences  correlate  with  social  isolaGon,  depression,  and  binge  eaGng  (Annis,  Cash,  &  Hrabosky,  2004;  Puhl  &  Brownell,  2001).  

Body  dissaGsfacGon    

•  Internalized,  weight-­‐related  self-­‐sGgma  is  recognized  by  self-­‐devaluaGon  and  fear  of  other  judgments  based  on  weight  (Lillis,  Luoma,  Levin,  &  Hayes,  2010).  

•  Body  dissaGsfacGon  is  characterized  by  behaviors  such  as  pre-­‐occupaGon  with  weight,  self-­‐devaluaGon,  avoidance  of  body  exposure  and  avoiding  for  example  inGmate  relaGonships  (Puhl  &  Heuer,  2009).  

Page 3: ACT and Obesity

12-­‐11-­‐10  

3  

EmoGonal  eaGng    

•  One  strategy  for  handling  negaGve  emoGons  is  eaGng  for  emoGonal  relief  (Spoor  et  al.,  2006;  Valdo  Ricca  et  al.,  2009).  

•  Shame  and  body  dissaGsfacGon  correlate  significantly  with  over  eaGng  among  obese  paGents  (Annis,  Cash,  &  Hrabosky,  2004;  Hrabosky  et  al.,  2007;  Puhl  &  Brownell,  2001).  

•  In  a  prospecGve  study,  body  dissaGsfacGon  was  shown  to  predict  binge  eaGng  a`er  five  years  among  overweight  individuals  (Neumark-­‐Sztainer,  Paxton,  Hannan,  Haines,  &  Story,  2006).    

EmoGonal  eaGng  and  experiental  aviodance    

•  ExperienGal  avoidance  is  predicGve  of  binge  eaGng  (Kingston,  Clarke,  &  Remington,  2010).    

•  ExperienGal  avoidance  seems  to  mediate  the  relaGon  between  negaGve  emoGons  and  binge  eaGng  (Kingston,  et  al.,  2010).  

Rebound  of  emoGonal  suppression  

•  Suppression  of  thoughts  related  to  food  predicts  food  cravings,  binge  eaGng  (Barnes  &  Tantleff-­‐Dunn,  2010;  Geliebter  &  Aversa,  2003).    

Page 4: ACT and Obesity

12-­‐11-­‐10  

4  

AssumpGons  

•  Behavior  paeerns  such  as  experiental  avoidance  -­‐  established  and  maintained    

•  IdenGfying  with  weight  and  body  shape  creates  suffering  

•  Pufng  life  on  hold  while  waiGng  to  lose  weight  reduces  life  quality    

ACT  for  obesity  

•  Aim  at  directly  target  the  underlying  factor  of  experienGal  avoidance  involved  in  inflexible  behavioral  paeerns.    

•  Rather  than  focusing  on  weight  and  eaGng  itself,  the  focus  is  on  observing,  in  a  non-­‐judgmental  fashion,  inner  experiences  as  separate  events  and  pufng  energy  into  valued  acGons.    

Experiments  -­‐  acceptance  and  defusion  strategies  

Acceptance  and  defusion  reduce  cravings  and  the  consumpGon  of  chocolate  compared  to  control  or  supression  strategies  (Forman  et  al.,  2007;  Hooper,  Sandoz,  Ashton,  Clarke,  &  McHugh,  2012).    

Page 5: ACT and Obesity

12-­‐11-­‐10  

5  

ACT  obesity  intervenGon  studies                  1.  Forman  EM,  Butryn  ML,  Hoffman  KL,  Herbert  JD.  An  Open  Trial  of  an  Acceptance-­‐Based  

Behavioral  IntervenGon  for  Weight  Loss.  Cog  Behav  Pract.  2009;16(2):223-­‐35.  

2.  Lillis  J,  Hayes  S,  BunGng  K,  Masuda  A.  Teaching  Acceptance  and  Mindfulness  to  Improve  the  Lives  of  the  Obese:  A  Preliminary  Test  of  a  TheoreGcal  Model.  Ann  Behav  Med.  2009;37(1):58-­‐69.  

3.  Lillis  J,  Levin  ME,  Hayes  SC.  Exploring  the  relaGonship  between  body  mass  index  and  health-­‐related  quality  of  life:  A  pilot  study  of  the  impact  of  weight  self-­‐sGgma  and  experienGal  avoidance.  J  Health  Psychol.  2011  July  1,  2011;16(5):722-­‐7.  

4.  Tapper  K,  et  al.  Exploratory  randomised  controlled  trial  of  a  mindfulness-­‐based  weight  loss  intervenGon  for  women.  AppeGte.  2009;52(2):396-­‐404.  

5.  Weineland  S,  Arvidsson  D,  Kakoulidis  TP,  Dahl  J.  Acceptance  and  commitment  therapy  for  bariatric  surgery  paGents,  a  pilot  RCT.  Obe  Res  Clin  Pract.  2012;6(1):21-­‐30.    

6.  Weineland  S,  Hayes  S,  Dahl,  J.  Psychological  flexibility  and  the  gains  of  acceptance-­‐based  treatment  for  post  bariatric  surgery:  Six  month  follow-­‐up  and  a  test  of  the  underlying  model,  Clin  Obes.  In  press  

Bariatric  surgery  –  evidence  based  for  long  term  weight  loss      

However,  there  are  sGll…    

•  Fear  of  weight  gain  (Kinzl,  Traweger,  Trefalt,  &  Biebl,  2003)  

•  Body  de-­‐evaluaGon  (Adami,  Meneghelli,  Bressani,  &  Scopinaro,  1999;  Kinzl  et  al.,  2003)  

•  SubjecGve  binge  eaGng  and  loss  of  control  over  food  (de  Zwaan  et  al.,  2003;  Niego  et  al.,  2007)          

Page 6: ACT and Obesity

12-­‐11-­‐10  

6  

Method  

•  Recruiment  in  a  clinical  obesity  surgery  sefng  •  N=39  (ACT=19  TAU=  20)  •  Drop  out:  4  in  ACT  and  2  in  TAU.    

Partcipants  

•  23  years  duraGon  of  obesity  •  20  years  of  failed  weight  loss  aeempts  prior  to  surgery  

•  PresenGng  concerns  with  body  dissaGsfacGon  and  eaGng    

Page 7: ACT and Obesity

12-­‐11-­‐10  

7  

ACT  -­‐  IntervenGon  

•  InGal  session:  Life-­‐line    •  6  weeks  Internet  treatment  and  phone  contact  

The  Internet  program  included  psycho-­‐educaGonal  texts,  wriGng  exercises,  movies  and  audio  files.  

•  Session  at  the  clinic  

TAU  intervenGon  

•  Standard  follow-­‐up  procedures,  dietary  advice  provided  by  the  bariatric  surgery  team.    

6  month  follow-­‐up  Mixed  Model  Repeated  Measures  (MMRM)  

Page 8: ACT and Obesity

12-­‐11-­‐10  

8  

MediaGon  

•  Do  post-­‐treatment  changes  in  psychological  flexibility  mediate  outcomes  (eaGng  disorder  aftudes  and  behaviors,  body  dissaGsfacGon,  and  quality  of  life)  at  six  month  follow  up?  

   

MediaGon  analysis    

Bootstrapped  cross  product  test,  entering  baseline  levels  of  the  AAQ-­‐W,  BMI,  specific  outcome  as  covariates  

AAQ-­‐W  mediated    Quality  of  life  (point  esGmate  =  3.32,  SE  =  2.32,  95%  CI:  0.05,  10.61)    

Body  dissaGsfacGon  (point  esG-­‐  mate  =  -­‐8.16,  SE  =  4.00,  95%  CI:  -­‐22.75,  -­‐2.67),    

Disordered  eaGng  (point  esGmate  =  -­‐0.35,  SE  =  0.22,  95%  CI:  -­‐0.84,  -­‐0.003).    

RelaGonship  between  treatment  to  outcome    a`er  accounGng/controlling  for  the  mediator  

•  Quality  of  life  non-­‐significant,  t  (29)  =  0.97,  p  =  0.34  

•  Body  dissaGsfacGon  non-­‐significant,  t  (29)  =  -­‐0.75,  p  =  0.46,  

•  Disordered  eaGng  non-­‐significant,  t  (29)  =  -­‐0.78,  p  =  0.45    

Page 9: ACT and Obesity

12-­‐11-­‐10  

9  

Conclusions  

ACT  is  promising  and  should  be  evaluated  further  for  obesity  (to  evaluate  the  effects  on  long  term  weight  loss)  and  a`er  bariatric  surgery.    

Thank  you!  [email protected]