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Cognitive Behavioral
Approaches to Managing
Chronic Pain
Daniel O’Connell, Ph.D.
danoconn@uw.edu
206 282-1007
Objectives
 Describe Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
 Describe Acceptance and Commitment Therapy
 Compare and Contrast these Approaches to Addressing
chronic pain
 Suggest strategies from each that can fit into exam
room conversations
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Thoughts
Emotions
Behaviors
Consequences
Event/Stimulus/Antcipations
Events/Stimuli
 Sensation:
 “I felt a twinge…”
 Anticipation:
 “I will have to go back to work.”
 “I have a doctor’s appointment.”
 Event:
 “My wife is complaining about me.”
 “I just got a letter from my disability insurer.”
 “Another year has passed since I last worked.”
Maladaptive Cognitions/Thoughts are the
Distortions to be Addressed
 Catastrophizing
 Emotional Reasoning
 All or nothing thinking
 Mind reading/projection/jumping to conclusions
 Postponement
 Entitlement
 Magnifying/Amplifying
 Victim-Persecutor-Rescuer
 Fear Avoidance
 Mental Filter
 Hopelessness
What are equally plausible but more
hopeful and less distorted thoughts?
 Key clinician demeanor:
 The patient is helped to reflect on his/her own cognitions and
their impact.
 The clinician does not argue with the patient.
 But does ask the patient to debate within himself and re-assess
rationality of thoughts and dispute/replace as needed to move in a
more constructive direction
 Empathy for the dilemma
 Comes with letting the patient own the problem and remain “second
most motivated person in the room”
Exploring maladaptive cognitions
 What makes them maladaptive?
 Interferes with best recovery and accommodation possible
 Is there a distortion working here? Which one(s)?
 Labeling distortions/teaching labels can be helpful tool
 Focus most on cognitions that affect functioning.
 Let’s examine some now…
Feelings/Emotions
 Thoughts and emotions are intertwined
 Thoughts can trigger emotions or extend their intensity and
duration.
 Emotions can cue up habitual thoughts.
 What emotions would you expect a patient to have who
thought that way?
 It is normal to feel that way when you are thinking that
way.
 Allows clinician to empathize rather that distance/criticize
Changing emotions typically comes from
changing thinking and/or behavior
 E.g.., If the patient is catastrophizing less about the
intolerability of discomfort, then he/she is more likely to
feel less fearful of PT and more likely to wholeheartedly
participate.
 E.g.., If the patient goes to PT, he/she may have a direct
experience that counters fears and builds hopefulness.
 If a patient tries relaxation/meditation/acceptance practices
they may be surprised at the shift in emotion.
 Medication may help change distressed emotions such as
anxiety and depression and associated thoughts may change
as well, reducing resistance to constructive behavior
Behavior
 Many different behaviors possible in chronic pain
 Destructive/Limiting
 Avoidance of feared situations
 Pain medication over-reliance
 Descent into constriction of normal life roles, goals
 Justification of disability, Blaming pain for everything
 Constructive Coping
 Tolerating/distancing/distracting from painful sensations
 Engaging in closest approximation of normal roles and
activities despite “discomfort”
 Making habit of the least “disabling” way of thinking about
one’s situation. Avoiding disability identity with its coherent
and restricting story about life’s possibilities and choices
Consequences
 If pain becomes overshadowing (in part because of
distortions that magnify its power) then consequences
are somewhat predictable.
 Activity, return to work, relationship, mood, life
satisfaction, medication use
 If pain can be managed as constructively as possible
consistent with reality then
 Best approximation of normal roles, values, activities is
discovered and maintained and adapted to
And those consequences…
 Becomes the next stimuli/events/situations that further
energize and shape the next round of thoughts,
emotions, behaviors and consequences
 Which is how the spiral either descends or ascends.
But if the clinician is not going to
argue, then what does he/she do?
 Respectfully set limits on yourself
 Medications
 criteria of “Safe/Effectiveness/Not doing more harm than
good”
 Disability Forms/Evaluations:
 Clear, transparent criteria
 “There are 4 criteria that the state/province requires us to
use in assessing the extent to which a person is disable.
Let’s go over those criteria together and see where you
stand.
 Further testing, surgery, procedures
 Again criteria of Safe/Effective/More Harm than Good
What else from a CBT perspective?
 Conversation with the patient in which you ask questions in a
non-rhetorical manner:
 “How are you thinking about this?”
 “What is the evidence for and against that idea?”
 “What about exceptions? How are we to understand them?”
 “What has been the impact of thinking this way?”
 “What do you imagine will be your situation at some future
point?” (challenges the short term pain relief now focus)
 “How does ______ (important people in patients life) think
about this? “What requests have they been making of you?”
“How open are you to trying to meet their needs despite your
discomfort?”
 “How do you imagine you might be thinking and feeling if your
spouse were the one with the pain problem and you were
trying to make sense of the way he/she was behaving?”
More CBT things for the clinician to
do:
 Stay respectful, avoid arguing, roll with resistance while holding to limits on yourself as
discussed in previous slide
 “I could see where you would not want to cut back on narcotics if you believed that they
were the only thing that got you through the day. If I thought that was necessary and also
safe and effective without causing more harm than good, then I would be willing to
prescribe them.”
 Express concern about current and future consequences
 “I am concerned that if you continue in this way you will look back on this as terrible
mistake. For instance, the belief that only after your pain has subsided, will it be possible
for you to become more active with your children. What do you think?”
 Extend your relationship to include others. Propose/require
 “I think we need to get the help of a good psychologist/psychiatrist/addiction
counselor/pain specialist to be sure we are not overlooking the role __________is playing
in making this all unmanageable for you.”
 “I would be willing to continue as your doctor if you would agree to _______ in the next
__________. Is this something you are open to?”
 “With your wife/daughter/etc., as important as they are in all this, I think it is essential
that we have a chance to include them in your next visit with me. Is that something you
are open to?”
Acceptance and Commitment
Therapy
 Emphasis on differentiation of “self/thinker” from the
“content of thought” which is vulnerable to the
limitations & consequences of language.
 “When you have the thought that…” rather than “I am
constantly in pain
 Goal is increasing flexibility to follow chosen values
despite fears, history etc.
 Processes of mindfulness/present moment awareness
and acceptance of painful thoughts/feelings where
CBT encourages appraisal of and disputation of
maladaptive thoughts.
Acceptance and Commitment
Therapy
 ACT differentiates the function/workability of thoughts
rather than their “truth”
 “How does having that thought move you closer or further
away from doing the things/living out the values most
important to you?”
 The Commitment of ACT is to persevering at actions
intended to lead to a more full and vital life that are
consistent with valued directions
Key ACT Goal is Greater Flexibility
 Pain of all kinds is inevitable in life
 Trying to control/avoid suffering leads us to develop inflexible
(usually avoidant) responses.
 Willingness to accept and tolerate pain without experiential
avoidance is the key.
 E.g., breathing through contractions
 To do this we must de-fuse words/thoughts from automatically
directing behavior
 E.g., “I am having the thought that…
 I am not the thought. I am the self/thinker in whom thoughts and feelings
arise and change and are workable or limiting.
 “So, I can go to the event and focus on the performance and friendships
even while having the thought/feeling of some discomfort?”
How ACT would handle these
thoughts
 “I can’t have intimacy because I was sexually abused as
child.” (ACT- “And when you notice yourself having that
thought what happens next?” the assumption being it
provokes inflexible responding/avoidance)
 “I can’t get my life going again as long as I have this pain.”
(ACT would not argue with this as maladaptive- ACT would
ask the person to look at this thought, its behavioral and
emotional affect (function). Then ACT would ask how this
thoughts interferes with pursuit of Valued Directions
 “And since you have had this pain for some time now with no
promised end in mind, and you have been living your life, the
question is, is there a better way to live it despite the pain?”
Committed Action
 ACT is a behavior therapy.
 It asks people to take action consistent with their valued
directions and to do it while accepting any painful thoughts or
feelings that “show up”.
 The Acceptance part of ACT focuses on a willingness to be
present, and not avoid or flee from uncomfortable thoughts
and feelings.
 Enormous empathy by the clinician
 The Commitment part of ACT asks people to clarify their
values in each role and then to take committed action in
specific areas agreed upon.
 “What can you commit yourself to do with you son this week,
despite the likelihood that you will be feeling some pain?”
References
 www.Painaction.com
 www.theacpa.com
 www.painedu.org
 Elmer B (2008) Hypnotize yourself out of pain. Book and CD
 Turk D (2005) The Pain Survival Guide
 Caudill M (2008) Managing Your Pain Before It Manages You.
 Steven Hayes (2005) Get Out of your Mind and into Your Life.
 Dahl J and Lundgren T (2006) Living Beyond Your Pain: Using
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy

More Related Content

Plenary 6 o'connell cb approaches to managing chronic pain

  • 1. Cognitive Behavioral Approaches to Managing Chronic Pain Daniel O’Connell, Ph.D. danoconn@uw.edu 206 282-1007
  • 2. Objectives  Describe Cognitive Behavioral Therapy  Describe Acceptance and Commitment Therapy  Compare and Contrast these Approaches to Addressing chronic pain  Suggest strategies from each that can fit into exam room conversations
  • 4. Events/Stimuli  Sensation:  “I felt a twinge…”  Anticipation:  “I will have to go back to work.”  “I have a doctor’s appointment.”  Event:  “My wife is complaining about me.”  “I just got a letter from my disability insurer.”  “Another year has passed since I last worked.”
  • 5. Maladaptive Cognitions/Thoughts are the Distortions to be Addressed  Catastrophizing  Emotional Reasoning  All or nothing thinking  Mind reading/projection/jumping to conclusions  Postponement  Entitlement  Magnifying/Amplifying  Victim-Persecutor-Rescuer  Fear Avoidance  Mental Filter  Hopelessness
  • 6. What are equally plausible but more hopeful and less distorted thoughts?  Key clinician demeanor:  The patient is helped to reflect on his/her own cognitions and their impact.  The clinician does not argue with the patient.  But does ask the patient to debate within himself and re-assess rationality of thoughts and dispute/replace as needed to move in a more constructive direction  Empathy for the dilemma  Comes with letting the patient own the problem and remain “second most motivated person in the room”
  • 7. Exploring maladaptive cognitions  What makes them maladaptive?  Interferes with best recovery and accommodation possible  Is there a distortion working here? Which one(s)?  Labeling distortions/teaching labels can be helpful tool  Focus most on cognitions that affect functioning.  Let’s examine some now…
  • 8. Feelings/Emotions  Thoughts and emotions are intertwined  Thoughts can trigger emotions or extend their intensity and duration.  Emotions can cue up habitual thoughts.  What emotions would you expect a patient to have who thought that way?  It is normal to feel that way when you are thinking that way.  Allows clinician to empathize rather that distance/criticize
  • 9. Changing emotions typically comes from changing thinking and/or behavior  E.g.., If the patient is catastrophizing less about the intolerability of discomfort, then he/she is more likely to feel less fearful of PT and more likely to wholeheartedly participate.  E.g.., If the patient goes to PT, he/she may have a direct experience that counters fears and builds hopefulness.  If a patient tries relaxation/meditation/acceptance practices they may be surprised at the shift in emotion.  Medication may help change distressed emotions such as anxiety and depression and associated thoughts may change as well, reducing resistance to constructive behavior
  • 10. Behavior  Many different behaviors possible in chronic pain  Destructive/Limiting  Avoidance of feared situations  Pain medication over-reliance  Descent into constriction of normal life roles, goals  Justification of disability, Blaming pain for everything  Constructive Coping  Tolerating/distancing/distracting from painful sensations  Engaging in closest approximation of normal roles and activities despite “discomfort”  Making habit of the least “disabling” way of thinking about one’s situation. Avoiding disability identity with its coherent and restricting story about life’s possibilities and choices
  • 11. Consequences  If pain becomes overshadowing (in part because of distortions that magnify its power) then consequences are somewhat predictable.  Activity, return to work, relationship, mood, life satisfaction, medication use  If pain can be managed as constructively as possible consistent with reality then  Best approximation of normal roles, values, activities is discovered and maintained and adapted to
  • 12. And those consequences…  Becomes the next stimuli/events/situations that further energize and shape the next round of thoughts, emotions, behaviors and consequences  Which is how the spiral either descends or ascends.
  • 13. But if the clinician is not going to argue, then what does he/she do?  Respectfully set limits on yourself  Medications  criteria of “Safe/Effectiveness/Not doing more harm than good”  Disability Forms/Evaluations:  Clear, transparent criteria  “There are 4 criteria that the state/province requires us to use in assessing the extent to which a person is disable. Let’s go over those criteria together and see where you stand.  Further testing, surgery, procedures  Again criteria of Safe/Effective/More Harm than Good
  • 14. What else from a CBT perspective?  Conversation with the patient in which you ask questions in a non-rhetorical manner:  “How are you thinking about this?”  “What is the evidence for and against that idea?”  “What about exceptions? How are we to understand them?”  “What has been the impact of thinking this way?”  “What do you imagine will be your situation at some future point?” (challenges the short term pain relief now focus)  “How does ______ (important people in patients life) think about this? “What requests have they been making of you?” “How open are you to trying to meet their needs despite your discomfort?”  “How do you imagine you might be thinking and feeling if your spouse were the one with the pain problem and you were trying to make sense of the way he/she was behaving?”
  • 15. More CBT things for the clinician to do:  Stay respectful, avoid arguing, roll with resistance while holding to limits on yourself as discussed in previous slide  “I could see where you would not want to cut back on narcotics if you believed that they were the only thing that got you through the day. If I thought that was necessary and also safe and effective without causing more harm than good, then I would be willing to prescribe them.”  Express concern about current and future consequences  “I am concerned that if you continue in this way you will look back on this as terrible mistake. For instance, the belief that only after your pain has subsided, will it be possible for you to become more active with your children. What do you think?”  Extend your relationship to include others. Propose/require  “I think we need to get the help of a good psychologist/psychiatrist/addiction counselor/pain specialist to be sure we are not overlooking the role __________is playing in making this all unmanageable for you.”  “I would be willing to continue as your doctor if you would agree to _______ in the next __________. Is this something you are open to?”  “With your wife/daughter/etc., as important as they are in all this, I think it is essential that we have a chance to include them in your next visit with me. Is that something you are open to?”
  • 16. Acceptance and Commitment Therapy  Emphasis on differentiation of “self/thinker” from the “content of thought” which is vulnerable to the limitations & consequences of language.  “When you have the thought that…” rather than “I am constantly in pain  Goal is increasing flexibility to follow chosen values despite fears, history etc.  Processes of mindfulness/present moment awareness and acceptance of painful thoughts/feelings where CBT encourages appraisal of and disputation of maladaptive thoughts.
  • 17. Acceptance and Commitment Therapy  ACT differentiates the function/workability of thoughts rather than their “truth”  “How does having that thought move you closer or further away from doing the things/living out the values most important to you?”  The Commitment of ACT is to persevering at actions intended to lead to a more full and vital life that are consistent with valued directions
  • 18. Key ACT Goal is Greater Flexibility  Pain of all kinds is inevitable in life  Trying to control/avoid suffering leads us to develop inflexible (usually avoidant) responses.  Willingness to accept and tolerate pain without experiential avoidance is the key.  E.g., breathing through contractions  To do this we must de-fuse words/thoughts from automatically directing behavior  E.g., “I am having the thought that…  I am not the thought. I am the self/thinker in whom thoughts and feelings arise and change and are workable or limiting.  “So, I can go to the event and focus on the performance and friendships even while having the thought/feeling of some discomfort?”
  • 19. How ACT would handle these thoughts  “I can’t have intimacy because I was sexually abused as child.” (ACT- “And when you notice yourself having that thought what happens next?” the assumption being it provokes inflexible responding/avoidance)  “I can’t get my life going again as long as I have this pain.” (ACT would not argue with this as maladaptive- ACT would ask the person to look at this thought, its behavioral and emotional affect (function). Then ACT would ask how this thoughts interferes with pursuit of Valued Directions  “And since you have had this pain for some time now with no promised end in mind, and you have been living your life, the question is, is there a better way to live it despite the pain?”
  • 20. Committed Action  ACT is a behavior therapy.  It asks people to take action consistent with their valued directions and to do it while accepting any painful thoughts or feelings that “show up”.  The Acceptance part of ACT focuses on a willingness to be present, and not avoid or flee from uncomfortable thoughts and feelings.  Enormous empathy by the clinician  The Commitment part of ACT asks people to clarify their values in each role and then to take committed action in specific areas agreed upon.  “What can you commit yourself to do with you son this week, despite the likelihood that you will be feeling some pain?”
  • 21. References  www.Painaction.com  www.theacpa.com  www.painedu.org  Elmer B (2008) Hypnotize yourself out of pain. Book and CD  Turk D (2005) The Pain Survival Guide  Caudill M (2008) Managing Your Pain Before It Manages You.  Steven Hayes (2005) Get Out of your Mind and into Your Life.  Dahl J and Lundgren T (2006) Living Beyond Your Pain: Using Acceptance and Commitment Therapy