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Article
A Randomized Dismantling Trial of the Open and Engaged Components of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy in an Online Intervention for Distressed College Students
Behaviour Research & Therapy
  • Michael E. Levin, Utah State University
  • Jennifer Krafft, Utah State University
  • Elizabeth T. Hicks, Utah State University
  • Michael P. Twohig, Utah State University
  • Benjamin G. Pierce, Utah State University
Document Type
Article
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd
Publication Date
1-1-2020
Abstract

This dismantling trial compared the effects of a full online Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) intervention to the isolated effects of the Open (i.e., acceptance, cognitive defusion) and Engaged (i.e., values, committed action) components of ACT. A sample of 181 distressed college students were randomized to one of four conditions: a 12-session full ACT website (Full), a version targeting the Open components (Open), a version targeting the Engaged components (Engaged), or waitlist. Participants in active conditions were also randomized to receive phone coaching or just email prompts to increase program adherence. All three ACT conditions significantly improved over time relative to the waitlist condition on the primary outcome of mental health symptoms. The Engaged and Full conditions had greater rates of reliable change on the primary outcome relative to waitlist, but not the Open condition. Similarly, only Engaged and Full conditions improved on positive mental health relative to waitlist. The Full condition had greater improvements on a few ACT process measures relative to Engaged and Open conditions, particularly cognitive fusion. Overall, results indicate targeting only the Open components of ACT was somewhat less effective, and that including both the Open and Engaged components led to greater decreases in cognitive fusion.

Citation Information
Levin, M.E., Krafft, J., Hicks, E.T., Pierce, B. & Twohig, M.P. (2020). A randomized dismantling trial of the open and engaged components of acceptance and commitment therapy in an online self-help program for distressed college students. Behaviour Research & Therapy.