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The Role of increased Psychological Flexibility on Quality of Life and Symptoms of Anxiety and Depression, in a Sample of Patients on Long-Term Sick Leave Receiving Acceptance and Commitment Therapy

Svendsen, Silje
Master thesis
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Hovedoppgave - Silje Svendsen (Locked)
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/282712
Date
2014
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  • Institutt for psykologi [1965]
Abstract
The present study had two aims. First, it was examined whether a workdirected

day rehabilitation program providing Acceptance and Commitment Therapy

(ACT) had an effect on quality of life, and symptoms of anxiety and depression in a

sample of patients on long-term sick leave. Then, it was investigated if higher levels

of improvement in the patients’ levels of psychological flexibility during treatment

predicted increases in their quality of life, and decreases in their levels of anxiety and

depression at posttreatment. Two-hundred and ten Norwegian patients on sick leave

for a minimum of eight weeks received the day rehabilitation program at Hysnes

Rehabilitation Center. Quality of life was measured with Short Form 8 (Ware,

Kosinski, Dewey, & Gandek, 2001), anxiety and depression were measured with

Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (Zigmond & Snaith, 1983) and psychological

flexibility was measured with the Acceptance and Action Questionnaire II (Bond et

al., 2011). The results demonstrated that the rehabilitation program had an effect on

the patients’ quality of life, depression and anxiety. It was also confirmed that

increases in psychological flexibility predicted the patients’ quality of life and levels

of depression at posttreatment. Patients’ anxiety levels at posttreatment were not

predicted by changes in psychological flexibility. The results demonstrate that a day

rehabilitation program based on ACT is a suitable treatment for improving quality of

life and reducing anxiety and depression in patients on long-term sick leave. Although

preliminary, the results also imply that psychological flexibility is a central process

affecting the change observed in patients’ quality of life and depression after an ACT

treatment. This was not true for the patients’ change in anxiety levels during

treatment.
Publisher
NTNU

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