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1

Hayes, Steven C., and Michael E. Levin. Mindfulness and acceptance for addictive behaviors: Applying contextual CBT to substance abuse and behavioral addictions. Oakland, CA: New Harbinger Publications, 2012.

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2

Orsillo, Susan M., and Lizabeth Roemer. Acceptance- and Mindfulness-Based Approaches to Anxiety: Conceptualization and Treatment. Springer, 2010.

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3

The Mindfulness And Acceptance Workbook For Bulimia A Guide To Breaking Free From Bulimia Using Acceptance And Commitment Therapy. New Harbinger Publications, 2011.

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4

Mindfulness And AcceptanceBased Behavioral Therapies in Practice Guides to Individualized EvidenceBased Treatment. Guilford Publications, 2010.

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5

(Foreword), Steven C. Hayes, ed. Acceptance & Commitment Therapy for Anxiety Disorders: A Practitioner's Treatment Guide to Using Mindfulness, Acceptance, And Values-Based Behavior Change Strategies. New Harbinger Publications, 2005.

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6

Faith-Based ACT for Christian Clients: An Integrative Treatment Approach. Taylor & Francis Group, 2016.

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7

Faith-Based ACT for Christian Clients : : An Integrative Treatment Approach. Taylor & Francis Group, 2016.

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8

Eifert, Georg H., 1952- author, ed. The mindfulness & acceptance workbook for anxiety: A guide to breaking free from anxiety, phobias & worry using acceptance & commitment therapy. New Harbinger Publications, 2016.

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9

Hayes, Steven C., John P. Forsyth, and Georg H. Eifert. Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Anxiety Disorders: A Practitioner's Treatment Guide to Using Mindfulness, Acceptance, and Values-Based Behavior Change Strategies. New Harbinger Publications, 2005.

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10

McKay, Matthew, and Aprilia West. Emotion Efficacy Therapy: A Brief, Exposure-Based Treatment for Emotion Regulation Integrating ACT and DBT. New Harbinger Publications, 2016.

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11

(Editor), Susan M. Orsillo, and Lizabeth Roemer (Editor), eds. Acceptance- and Mindfulness-Based Approaches to Anxiety: Conceptualization and Treatment (Series in Anxiety and Related Disorders). Springer, 2005.

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12

The Mindfulness Acceptance Workbook For Social Anxiety Shyness Using Acceptance And Commitment Therapy To Free Yourself From Fear Reclaim Your Life. New Harbinger Publications, 2013.

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13

Turner, Nick, Phil Welches, and Sandra Conti. Mindfulness-Based Sobriety: An Integrative Approach to Addiction Recovery Using Relapse Prevention Therapy, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, and Motivational Interviewing. New Harbinger Publications, 2014.

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14

Bateman, Anthony W., and Roy Krawitz. Top ten additional resource-efficient treatment strategies. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med:psych/9780199644209.003.0008.

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This chapter describes ten strategies that are additional to those previously described. The effective specialist BPD treatments that have been drawn mostly from in this chapter are DBT and mentalization-based therapy as these are the two BPD treatments with the most robust evidence base. Strategies include mentalizing and mindfulness; valued action irrespective of emotions; self-acceptance; accepting thoughts and valued action; changing thoughts; decreasing hyperarousal; chain analysis; structure; DBT skills and clinical feedback of treatment outcomes.
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15

Morrison, Kate L., Brooke M. Smith, and Michael P. Twohig. Mindfulness and Acceptance Therapies for OCD. Edited by Christopher Pittenger. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190228163.003.0039.

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This chapter summarizes mindfulness-based therapies for observe-compulsive disorder (OCD). Mindfulness and acceptance interventions focus on the way in which individuals with OCD address or experience their obsessions, anxiety, uncertainty, and bodily sensations, and how this impacts their behavior. Mindfulness and acceptance interventions include a variety of procedures and treatment packages that center around the common goals of being open, aware, and present with emotional, cognitive, and bodily experiences that can otherwise derail intended actions. Although more evidence is needed, there is sufficient data to suggest that mindfulness and acceptance interventions are reasonable options for the treatment of OCD and related disorders. This chapter summarizes the theory and application of mindfulness and acceptance therapies and the data examining their use for OCD and related disorders.
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16

Moss, Aleeze, and Diane Reibel. Mindfulness-Based Interventions for Psychiatric Disorders. Edited by Anthony J. Bazzan and Daniel A. Monti. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190690557.003.0012.

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Mindfulness-Based Interventions (MBIs) are nonpharmacological interventions that show promise for the treatment of a number of mental health conditions. This chapter describes several MBIs, specifically Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR), Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT), Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) and the research that supports the efficacy of these interventions in the treatment of psychiatric disorders. MBSR and MBCT have been shown to be effective in the treatment of anxiety and depression. DBT has been shown to be effective in the treatment of borderline personality disorder and ACT effective in the treatment of obsessive-compulsive disorder. New MBIs are being developed to work specifically with populations suffering with posttraumatic stress disorder, eating disorders, addictions, and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Current research on neural mechanisms associated with mindfulness training and its benefits are demonstrating structural and functional changes in the brain.
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17

Fleming, C. J. Eubanks, and James V. Córdova. Emerging Approaches to Empirically Based Couples Interventions. Edited by Erika Lawrence and Kieran T. Sullivan. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199783267.013.009.

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Given the important influence that intimate relationships have on general physical and mental health, the field of couples research is constantly innovating to maximize the impact of interventions on relationship health and intimacy. At present, couples interventions are evolving by either (1) improving the quality of tertiary interventions through deliberately addressing the emotional complexities of relationships in addition to basic skill building or (2) lowering the barriers to help-seeking in an effort to reach the greatest number of people in need at the earliest possible intervention point. This chapter will address how tertiary treatments, such as Insight-oriented Couples Therapy and acceptance and commitment therapy, have been adapted to potentially improve therapy outcomes for couples. Brief and web-based interventions, such as the Marriage Checkup, Power of Two Online, and OurRelationship.com, will also be discussed as examples of making couples’ treatment as timely and as accessible as possible.
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18

Uncovering happiness: Overcoming depression with mindfulness and self-compassion. Atria Books, 2015.

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19

Pachankis, John E., and Steven A. Safren, eds. Handbook of Evidence-Based Mental Health Practice with Sexual and Gender Minorities. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med-psych/9780190669300.001.0001.

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The Handbook of Evidence-Based Mental Health Practice with Sexual and Gender Minorities represents the first compendium of evidence-based approaches to sexual and gender minority (SGM)-affirmative mental health practice. In the past several years, clinical researchers have begun developing and adapting evidence-based mental health treatment approaches to be affirmative of SGM individuals’ unique mental health. Because these approaches draw on research documenting unique psychosocial processes underlying SGM individuals’ mental health as well as adapt existing evidence-based treatments to impact these processes, these treatments can be considered evidence-based. Because these approaches promote effective coping with stigma-related stress and are often developed with feedback from SGM community members, these treatments can also be considered SGM-affirmative. This handbook compiles these approaches, including evidence-based treatments for specific populations within the SGM community (e.g., youth, transgender individuals, same-sex couples, parents, and bisexuals), for specific mental health problems (e.g., anxiety, depression, substance abuse, trauma, eating disorders, sexual health), and using novel modalities (e.g., group therapy; acceptance-based, dialectical behavior therapy; attachment-based, transdiagnostic therapy). Each chapter includes conceptual background and practical guidance so that mental health practitioners, researchers, educators, and students can both understand how to implement each of these approaches and develop future tests of their efficacy and the efficacy of other SGM-affirmative approaches.
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20

Roemer, Lizabeth, Shannon M. Erisman, and Susan M. Orsillo. Mindfulness and Acceptance-Based Treatments for Anxiety Disorders. Oxford University Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195307030.013.0036.

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21

Clinical research on the efficacy of TENS. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199673278.003.0008.

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The acceptance of a treatment into mainstream medicine is influenced by a wide variety of factors. Traditionally, practitioners rely on information gleaned from their experience of using treatments on their patients although this can be misleading. Clinical research uses experiments to determine whether therapeutic effects of a treatment are attributed to its active ingredient by removing biases that confound clinical observation. This helps to determine whether treatments are efficacious. The purpose of this chapter is to overview evidence from clinical research on the efficacy of TENS for the management of pain by covering evidence-based practice, clinical research on acute pain including post-operative pain and labour pain, chronic musculoskeletal pain, including back pain and osteoarthritis, chronic neuropathic pain, including peripheral and central neuropathic pain, and cancer pain. It also discusses challenges in TENS research.
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22

Forman, Evan M., and Meghan L. Butryn. Effective Weight Loss. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med:psych/9780190232009.001.0001.

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Millions of people attempt to lose weight every year, but most will not succeed. Simply learning about a new diet and exercise plan is not enough. This book presents 25 detailed sessions of an empirically supported, cognitive-behavioral treatment package called acceptance-based behavioral treatment (ABT) that has now been utilized successfully in five large National Institute of Health–sponsored clinical trials. The foundation of this approach is comprised of the nutritional, physical activity, and behavioral components of the most successful, gold-standard behavioral weight loss packages, such as Look Ahead and the Diabetes Prevention Project. These components are synthesized with acceptance, willingness, behavioral commitment, motivation, and relapse prevention strategies drawn from Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, Dialectical Behavior Therapy and Relapse Prevention Therapy. ABT is premised on the idea that specialized self-control skills are necessary for weight control, given our innate desire to consume delicious foods and to conserve energy. These self-control skills revolve around a willingness to choose behaviors that may be perceived as uncomfortable for the sake of a more valuable objective. The treatment focuses on both weight loss and weight loss maintenance and aims to confer lifelong skills that facilitate long-term weight control. The companion Client Workbook contains summaries of session content, worksheets, handouts, and assignments.
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23

Forman, Evan M., and Meghan L. Butryn. Effective Weight Loss. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med:psych/9780190232023.001.0001.

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Millions of people attempt to lose weight every year, but most will not succeed. Simply learning about a new diet and exercise plan is not enough. This book presents 25 detailed sessions of an empirically supported, cognitive-behavioral treatment package called acceptance-based behavioral treatment (ABT) that has now been utilized successfully in five large National Institute of Health–sponsored clinical trials. The foundation of this approach is comprised of the nutritional, physical activity, and behavioral components of the most successful, gold-standard behavioral weight loss packages, such as Look Ahead and the Diabetes Prevention Project. These components are synthesized with acceptance, willingness, behavioral commitment, motivation, and relapse prevention strategies drawn from acceptance and commitment therapy, dialectical behavior therapy and relapse prevention therapy. ABT is premised on the idea that specialized self-control skills are necessary for weight control, given our innate desire to consume delicious foods and to conserve energy. These self-control skills revolve around a willingness to choose behaviors that may be perceived as uncomfortable for the sake of a more valuable objective. The treatment focuses on both weight loss and weight loss maintenance and aims to confer lifelong skills that facilitate long-term weight control. This companion Client Workbook contains summaries of session content, worksheets, handouts, and assignments.
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24

Kulkarni, Kunal, James Harrison, Mohamed Baguneid, and Bernard Prendergast, eds. Ophthalmology. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198729426.003.0027.

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In recent years, ophthalmologists have realized the importance of evidence-based studies of therapy in the other common causes of visual disability: diabetic retinopathy, chronic glaucoma, age-related macular degeneration, and the surgical treatment of myopia. The rapid acceptance of new therapy for these conditions has been a direct consequence of prospective randomized controlled trials. In this chapter, the most important studies in these fields will be considered.
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25

Macauley, Robert C. Pain and Symptom Management at the End of Life (DRAFT). Edited by Robert C. Macauley. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199313945.003.0007.

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The pendulum of pain treatment has swung from stoic acceptance before the widespread availability of opioids, to embrace of opioids as pain became the “fifth vital sign,” to significant concern in light of the current opioid epidemic. The use of opioids for chronic pain should be differentiated from their use in palliative care, where there still exists significant concern for hastened death when high doses are used (i.e., opiophobia). While clinicians should be familiar with the Rule of Double Effect to justify such use, the rule is not truly needed because of the rarity of respiratory depression when opioids are used appropriately. Appropriate pain treatment is a human right, and as such surrogates should not be able to refuse it based on their own views, and global inequities prompt significant justice concerns.
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26

Sanetti, Lisa, Melissa A. Collier-Meek, and Lindsay Fallon. Fidelity with Flexibility. Edited by Sara Maltzman. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199739134.013.25.

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Research has linked the use of evidence-supported treatments to effective, efficient therapeutic outcomes. Questions related to the best way to disseminate and implement evidence-supported treatments in the field has led to discussions about transportability of treatments from controlled to applied settings. Specifically, scholars have focused on issues related to treatment fidelity, acceptability, and adoption versus adaptation of evidence-based treatments in practice. Treatment fidelity, a multidimensional construct, pertains to how extensively a treatment is delivered to a client, and it may be affected by several variables. Although the relationship is complex, treatment fidelity is considered an important moderator of client outcomes. Furthermore, the acceptability of a treatment appears to be of importance. Simply, if a treatment is perceived to be acceptable, it is more likely to be implemented with high levels of fidelity, increasing the chances that successful therapeutic outcomes will result. Nevertheless data indicate that some clinicians are wary of using evidence-supported treatments; their chief concern is feasibility of implementation, which could affect treatment fidelity and acceptability. Thus, there is a debate about whether evidence-supported treatments should be adopted strictly as developed or whether they might be adapted to improve implementation and acceptability. In adaptation of a treatment, relevant clinician variables (e.g., training received, availability of resources) and client factors (e.g., cultural fit) might be considered to promote therapeutic outcomes. This chapter describes how the key to treatment success may be to strike a balance between fidelity and adaptation of evidence-based treatments and fidelity with flexibility.
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27

Peteet, John R. Values and Pluralism in Psychiatry. Edited by John R. Peteet, Mary Lynn Dell, and Wai Lun Alan Fung. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190681968.003.0002.

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Psychiatry belongs to both science and the humanities, but it has often been more concerned with being evidence based than value based. One consequence has been the unacknowledged acceptance of values prevailing in the culture. Another, despite growing attention to ethical concerns, has been the lack of a clearly articulated set of values with which to approach the complexities of clinical work. Four core values—prevention and treatment of disease, patient centeredness, relief of suffering, and enhancement of functioning—can be seen to emerge from psychiatry’s roots in humanistic medicine. Each of these values needs to be counterbalanced by the others and interpreted from the perspective of the clinician’s and the patient’s spiritual or religious worldview. Together, they offer a rationale for assessing the patient’s disorder, chief concern, and prerequisites for flourishing. In this chapter, three vignettes illustrate the utility of these core values in approaching challenging clinical cases.
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28

Douaihy, Antoine, and K. Rivet Amico, eds. Motivational Interviewing in HIV Care. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190619954.001.0001.

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Motivational Interviewing in HIV Care reflects significant advances in clinical practice and research, as well as the growing momentum of professional acceptance of the motivational interviewing (MI) approach in HIV care. Original, comprehensive, and timely, with clinical illustrations and practical tips, along with discussion of innovative demonstrations projects in the United States and internationally, it features chapters on the latest MI concepts, evidence base, and its applications in the HIV continuum of care. Written with the spirit of MI, this clinically engaging, pragmatic, and empirically based book covers the applications of MI in addressing social determinants of HIV and the integration of MI with other treatment modalities. A whole section showcases training, dissemination, and the role of technology in HIV practice. Ethical dilemmas in the practice of MI in HIV care are explored. The coeditors are joined by expert contributors, researchers, and practitioners in a truly collaborative project, filling a unique niche in the HIV field. This volume identifies and debates future directions for research and clinical practice in HIV care.
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29

Willer, Jan. Could it be Adult ADHD? Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med:psych/9780190256319.001.0001.

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One out of every 10 adult psychotherapy clients—or more—probably has attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). When psychotherapists miss the ADHD, treatment is frustrating and less effective. This book is for the general mental health professional who wishes to learn how to recognize, assess, and treat adult ADHD. Adults with ADHD are very different, developmentally and symptomatically, from children. ADHD affects adults of all races, gender identities, and backgrounds, and obvious hyperactivity is rarely part of the adult clinical picture. This book provides a full description of adult ADHD symptoms, based on the most current research, including executive functioning problems, emotional dysregulation, atypical reward sensitivity, and problems with time perception. Complete guidance to recognizing adult ADHD is provided, including behavior displayed during psychotherapy, developmental issues, educational challenges, and adaptive functioning problems. Depression, anxiety, self-image issues, and substance abuse are addressed, since these mental health problems are commonly associated with adult ADHD. Guidance is provided to help the mental health practitioner provide psychoeducation about cognitive differences in ADHD, which is essential for client self-acceptance and adaptive functioning. Common psychotherapy problems with ADHD clients are addressed, including chronic lateness to sessions, missed appointments, motivation problems, difficulties with homework, and tangentiality. The principles of cognitive-behavioral treatment of ADHD are provided, along with case examples to illustrate the implementation of these techniques. An overview of medications for ADHD is provided, including their benefits, contraindications, and side effects. Nontraditional treatments are reviewed for their effectiveness.
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30

Cheatle, Martin, and Perry G. Fine, eds. Facilitating Treatment Adherence in Pain Medicine. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190600075.001.0001.

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One of the most distressing features of a healthcare providers practice is that of patient nonadherence. Adherence refers to an active, voluntary, collaborative involvement of the patient in a mutually acceptable course of behavior to produce a desired preventative or therapeutic result. Most of the research in the area of medical adherence has been focused on medication adherence or increasing the likelihood that a patient will take their medications as prescribed by their physician. Adherence also has a broader application with regards to patient behaviors that can either support or undermine a positive response to prescribed therapies.In the field of pain medicine there are a number of evidence-based interventions that can improve an individual’s pain, mood and functionality, but this depends highly on the patient adhering to the prescribed treatment regimens.This book will provide a practically oriented guide to understanding the conceptual models of adherence and non-adherence and methods to improve adherence, to both pharmacotherapy and psychosocial pain management strategies. Topics include the use of biometrics to measure and promote adherence, employing novel psychosocial techniques to improve adherence to pain management and healthy lifestyle interventions and the ethical considerations of patient and clinician nonadherence.
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31

McCracken, Lance M., and Whitney Scott. Motivation from the Perspective of Contextual Cognitive Behavioral Approaches and the Psychological Flexibility Model. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190627898.003.0014.

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In everyday uses, the term motivation may imply a kind of mechanistic, “inside” the person, type of process. Contextual approaches, on the other hand, adopt an evolutionary perspective on motivation that emphasizes the selection of behavior patterns through the joint actions of historical consequences and verbal or cognitive processes, themselves considered the product of the same contextual processes of selection by consequences. The contextual focus on building, maintaining, and elaborating behavior patterns from directly manipulable contextual features enables a focus on variables that are able to serve the purpose of prediction and influence over behavior. Current studies of these processes apply the psychological flexibility model, including its processes of values-based and committed action. Laboratory studies of these processes demonstrate their potential importance in healthy functioning in relation to chronic pain. Treatment studies, including studies of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), also demonstrate that enhancing these motivation-related processes has clinical utility.
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32

Waldo, Albert L. Rate versus rhythm control therapy for atrial fibrillation. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198784906.003.0511.

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Based on data from several clinical trials, either rate control or rhythm control is an acceptable primary therapeutic strategy for patients with atrial fibrillation. However, since atrial fibrillation tends to recur no matter the therapy, rate control should almost always be a part of the treatment. If a rhythm control strategy is selected, it is important to recognize that recurrence of atrial fibrillation is common, but not clinical failure per se. Rather, the frequency and duration of episodes, as well as severity of symptoms during atrial fibrillation episodes should guide treatment decisions. Thus, occasional recurrence of atrial fibrillation despite therapy may well be clinically acceptable. However, for some patients, rhythm control may be the only strategy that is acceptable. In short, for most patients, either a rate or rhythm control strategy should be considered. However, for all patients, there are two main goals of therapy. One is to avoid stroke and/or systemic embolism, and the other is to avoid a tachycardia-induced cardiomyopathy. Also, because of the frequency of atrial fibrillation recurrence despite the treatment strategy selected, patients with stroke risks should receive anticoagulation therapy despite seemingly having achieved stable sinus rhythm. For patients in whom a rate control strategy is selected, a lenient approach to the acceptable ventricular response rate is a resting heart rate of 110 bpm, and probably 90 bpm. The importance of achieving and maintaining sinus rhythm in patients with atrial fibrillation and heart failure remains to be clearly established.
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33

Przekop, Peter. Professionally Directed Non-Pharmacological Management of Chronic Pain (DRAFT). Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190265366.003.0016.

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This chapter is a complement to Chapter 15, concentrating on the non-pharmacological approaches to chronic pain. It features a discussion on the utility of mind-body therapies, psychosocial treatments, and technology-based therapies in the context of recovery through 12-Step programs and other mutual support groups. Such settings are commonly poorly receptive to medication management of either pain or addiction; the availability of other approaches can bridge the gap, leading to effective management of both. The therapies discussed include “movement” therapies, such as internal qi gong, tai chi, yoga, and martial arts. Healing touch, reiki, external qi gong, and acupuncture are examples of “energy” therapies, requiring an intercessor. Among the psychosocial treatments are motivational interviewing, cognitive restructuring, cognitive behavioral therapy, acceptance-based cognitive therapy, operant training, hypnosis, relaxation training, and mindfulness/meditation. Addressed as procedures are massage, chiropractic and osteopathic manipulations, trans-epidermal nerve stimulation (TENS), and transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS).
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34

Wilson, G. Terence. Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Eating Disorders. Edited by W. Stewart Agras and Athena Robinson. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190620998.013.15.

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This chapter discusses cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) as applicable to all eating disorders in adults and adolescents. It reviews the most recent manual-based enhanced CBT (CBT-E), which not only appears to be more effective than the previous protocol but also is applicable to all eating disorders and enhances individualizing treatment even within specific diagnoses. The chapter considers the effectiveness of CBT compared to behavior weight loss treatment, pharmacotherapy, and interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT). It considers patient access to evidence-based CBT and discusses effective dissemination and implementation of competently administered CBT-E as a research priority. It describes and considers the effectiveness of a guided self-help form of CBT (CBTgsh), which provides a brief, cost-effective, acceptable, and scalable intervention. It describes possible further development of CBTgsh as a scalable e-therapy (using Internet and mobile devices) given that it is a program-based intervention that can be widely implemented by nonspecialists.
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