Introducing a Physical Therapist-Led Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Training for Pain: A Clinical Perspective

IF 0.5 Q4 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Internet Journal of Allied Health Sciences and Practice Pub Date : 2022-09-30 DOI:10.46743/1540-580x/2022.2061
Cristhian Figueroa, Iacopo Vagliano, Oscar Rodriguez Rocha, Marco Torchiano, Catherine Faron Zucker, Juan Carlos Corrales, Maurizio Morisio
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Purpose: Mounting evidence supports the use of cognitive and behavioral techniques as part of physical therapist practice. These methods are used within a physical therapist’s multimodal treatment approach for the management of pain and to facilitate health behavior change. There is a multitude of evidence-based cognitive behavioral techniques to choose from including newer approaches based on Acceptance and Commitment Therapy. Yet few studies have examined physical therapists’ perceptions to learning and implementing ACT into clinical practice. The purpose of this manuscript is to present a clinical perspective of physical therapists learning about and incorporating Acceptance and Commitment Therapy in clinical practice. Methods: An 8-week online physical therapist-led ACT for chronic pain training was completed by 65 physical therapists. A post-training evaluation was developed and then scored by 46 participants. The evaluation included 15-questions with regard to the self-reported perceptions of learning foundational ACT skills necessary to implement into physical therapy practice, a deeper understanding of psychological factors involved in musculoskeletal pain, confidence in managing musculoskeletal pain, utility in physical therapist practice, and the recognition of a new or different approach to treating musculoskeletal pain. Results: Participants’ self-reported perceptions were highly positive with 73% reporting the training furthered their understanding of psychological factors in chronic musculoskeletal pain and 100% reported learning the foundational ACT skills necessary to implement it into physical therapy practice. In addition, 7 sub-themes regarding the ACT training emerged from a qualitative content analysis and included the following: 1) The training filled a knowledge gap in understanding of how to assess and treat psychological factors related to pain, 2) A mixture of prerecorded video training, reading, experiential exercises, and self-reflection via the ACTPTE were critical to reinforce learning, 3) Coaching and supervision calls were a useful part of the training and helped to translate course knowledge and implement into clinical practice, 4) Having an opportunity to practice in a group setting with like-minded peers was a critical component of confidence building, 5) Ongoing communication, networking, and mentorship via the online forum and coaching calls allowed participants to complete the course material on-time, stay connected, and share stories and experiences about implementing the material in practice, 6) The ACT stance of not changing pain or related psychological content (example: not changing thoughts, pain related beliefs, reconceptualizing pain) may run counter to other psychologically-informed approaches found in physical therapy practice and took some time for practitioners to process and integrate, 7) Some practitioners expressed that ACT helped them cope with work-related stress and burnout and to drop the struggle of fixing or curing every patient with pain. Conclusions: ACT delivered via an online training was acceptable to physical therapists and supervision calls were necessary for confidence building and implementation into practice. The ACT model was perceived as adaptable to the practice of physical therapy as well as the complex clinical and psychosocial presentation of many chronic pain conditions. Future investigations should explore brief training interventions, treatment fidelity, long-term outcomes, the development and validation of a scale to measure knowledge, concepts and skills conceptualizing psychological flexibility within physical therapist practice.
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以物理治疗师为主导的疼痛接受与承诺治疗训练:临床视角
目的:越来越多的证据支持认知和行为技术作为物理治疗师实践的一部分。这些方法在物理治疗师的多模式治疗方法中用于疼痛管理和促进健康行为的改变。有许多基于证据的认知行为技术可供选择,包括基于接受和承诺疗法的新方法。然而,很少有研究调查了物理治疗师对学习和实施ACT临床实践的看法。本手稿的目的是提出物理治疗师在临床实践中学习和纳入接受和承诺治疗的临床观点。方法:65名物理治疗师完成了为期8周的在线物理治疗师主导的慢性疼痛训练。培训后评估被开发出来,然后由46名参与者打分。评估包括15个问题,涉及自我报告对学习基本ACT技能的认知,这些技能是实施物理治疗实践所必需的,对涉及肌肉骨骼疼痛的心理因素有更深的理解,对管理肌肉骨骼疼痛的信心,在物理治疗师实践中的效用,以及对治疗肌肉骨骼疼痛的新方法或不同方法的认识。结果:参与者自我报告的认知是非常积极的,73%的人报告说训练促进了他们对慢性肌肉骨骼疼痛的心理因素的理解,100%的人报告说学习了将其应用于物理治疗实践所必需的基本ACT技能。此外,从定性内容分析中得出关于ACT培训的7个分主题,包括以下内容:1)培训填补了在理解如何评估和治疗与疼痛相关的心理因素方面的知识空白;2)预先录制的视频培训、阅读、体验式练习和通过ACTPTE进行的自我反思对加强学习至关重要;3)指导和监督电话是培训的有用部分,有助于将课程知识转化为临床实践。4)有机会与志同道合的同龄人一起在小组环境中练习是建立信心的关键组成部分;5)通过在线论坛和辅导电话进行持续的沟通、网络和指导,使参与者能够按时完成课程材料,保持联系,并分享在实践中实施材料的故事和经验;6)不改变疼痛或相关心理内容的ACT立场(例如:不改变想法,与疼痛相关的信念,重新定义疼痛)可能与物理治疗实践中发现的其他心理学知识方法背道而驰,从业者需要一些时间来处理和整合。7)一些从业者表示,ACT帮助他们应对工作压力和倦怠,并放弃治疗或治愈每个疼痛患者的斗争。结论:通过在线培训提供的ACT对物理治疗师来说是可以接受的,监督电话对于建立信心和实施实践是必要的。ACT模型被认为适用于物理治疗的实践,以及许多慢性疼痛条件的复杂临床和心理社会表现。未来的调查应探讨简短的培训干预,治疗的保真度,长期的结果,开发和验证一个量表来衡量知识,概念和技能概念化心理灵活性在物理治疗师的实践。
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自引率
25.00%
发文量
18
审稿时长
35 weeks
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