A collaborative approach
By combining elements of cognitive behavioral therapy with another psychosocial approach called acceptance and commitment therapy, the ImPAT technique seeks to use integrated approaches to help patients fixate less on their pain and more on other aspects of life.
"We want to take the focus off pain and put it onto functioning and finding pleasurable ways to spend time," Ilgen says. "There's also a strong link between depression and pain. Pain is responsive to mood and mood is responsive to social support."
In an
editorial accompanying the new paper, another addiction and pain specialist, William C. Becker, Ph.D. of Yale University and the Connecticut VA, notes that the new results are impressive - particularly because ImPAT was compared with another psychosocial approach.
And there is room to grow. The paper's researchers, including the U-M Addiction Center director and senior author Frederic Blow, Ph.D, have already launched a follow-up study in a larger group of 480 non-veterans in a residential addiction treatment program.
ImPAT, they note, has the potential to be easily and inexpensively adopted by addiction treatment centers and groups worldwide.
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