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Mindfulness skills training for adults with intellectual d isabilities

Mindfulness skills training for adults with intellectual d isabilities. Russell Botting 1 , Felicity Cowdrey 2 , Liam Reilly 1 , Kirsty James 2 , Graham Thew 2 , Katherine Donnelly 3, Linda Walz 1 1. Complex Health Needs Service, Sirona Care and Health, Bath.

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Mindfulness skills training for adults with intellectual d isabilities

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  1. Mindfulness skills training for adults with intellectual disabilities Russell Botting1, Felicity Cowdrey2, Liam Reilly1, Kirsty James2, Graham Thew2, Katherine Donnelly3, Linda Walz1 1. Complex Health Needs Service, Sirona Care and Health, Bath. 2. Clinical Psychology Unit and Training Centre, University of Bath. 3. Department of Clinical Psychology, University of Exeter.

  2. What we will cover: • Mindfulness • What is it? • Evidence-base for mindfulness • Mindfulness in ID populations • Study 1: Pilot study of mindfulness skills training (Group 1) • Study 2: Evaluation of mindfulness skills training (Group 2 and 3) • Discussion and Conclusion • Limitations • Our reflections • Future directions

  3. Mindfulness • Mindfulness means paying attention in a particular way… • on purpose • in the present moment • non-judgementally • Cultivated through a range of meditative practices Jon Kabat-Zinn (1990)

  4. Evidence-base • Mindfulness increasingly popular approach • Emerging evidence-base for its use in a number of physical health problems (e.g. cancer, aids, pain) and mental health problems (e.g. stress, anxiety, depression)(for a review see Khouryet al., 2013) • Forms part of DBT, ACT, MBCT and MBSR • MBCT recommended by NICE (2009) for relapse prevention in depression

  5. Mindfulness in adults with ID? • Adults with ID experience higher rates of mental and physical health problems compared to those without ID (Cooper et al., 2007) • Adults with ID should have access to the same evidence-based treatments as those without ID (Valuing People, DoH, 2001) • Few studies have reported on the use of mindfulness in ID

  6. Chapman et al., (2013) review • 11 studies • Most commonly taught meditation practice was Soles of the Feet • Mindfulness generally provided to individuals, rather than in groups • Length & manner of training varied • All studies found improvements after mindfulness training e.g. reduced aggression/sexual arousal/weight

  7. Chapman et al., (2013) review • Participant feedback suggests: • May initially find practice difficult to understand as not easy to remember event • Repeated practice, use of role-play and adding stimulus to feet helped • Individuals valued learning to control their own feelings rather than being told to calm down by others, and found this reinforcing

  8. Pilot study: Are mindfulness practices, taught in a group format, acceptable and useful for adults with ID?(Donnelly, James and Walz, In press)

  9. Preparation • Adapting practices e.g. wording, type of practice • Group location? • Involvement of support workers? • Length of group? • Letter & information sheet • Initial meeting about group • Evaluation - Coping measure, interviews, feedback

  10. The pilot group • Four-week group run for an hour • Four participants (half female) • Recruited from CLDT due to difficulties coping with emotions such anxiety or anger • Two participants accompanied by their support worker / PA • Facilitated by clinical psychology trainee (KJ) and volunteer

  11. Session structure • Orientation – introductions, session plan, group rules • Introductory task – shifting focus of attention • Mindfulness training – Soles of the feet practice • Group discussion & feedback • Discussion about home practice • Session feedback questionnaire

  12. Mindfulness group feedback questionnaire

  13. Participant feedback • Helpful aspects: • “The mindfulness practices” • “Learning new skills” • “Focusing on things to bring my mind back from wondering” • “Learnt to think about today not yesterday” • “Sharing with the rest of the group” • “Making new friends” • “Being with the group” • Least helpful aspects: • “It did bring up the past” • “I’m not sure about the feet one”

  14. Modifications based on feedback • Six-week group • Focus on the palms of the hands or soles of the feet • Add in another practice • Add in quantitative measure for evaluation • Modified Five Factor Mindfulness Questionnaire (FFMQ-m) • One item from each of the five factors: • non-reactivity to inner experience • observing thoughts and feelings • acting with awareness • describing/labelling with words • non-judging of experience

  15. Groups 2 and 3: Is a modified protocol acceptable and useful for adults with ID and does the group program lead to an increase in self-reported mindfulness?

  16. Groups 2 and 3 • Two six-week courses each session 60-90 minutes • Total of 11 participants with ID • group 2, n=5 • group 3, n= 6 • Facilitated by trainee clinical psychologist and assistant psychologist • Feedback sheet after each session • Home practice CD (Singh et al., 2003 script)

  17. Session structure

  18. results

  19. Quantitative results No significant difference between the pre-group and post-group scores on four of the five factors of the FFMQ-m (p> .05) Scores on the describing item (“I'm good at describing how I feel”) were significantly higher post-group than the pre-group scores (p≤ .05)

  20. Mindful self-reflection • “Today and now is what matters” • “Try not to worry too much” • “Realising how distracted I am” • “I like my thoughts today, I've got a lot on my mind this week” • Noticing improvements • “It is getting easier I think” • “The session has been very helpful for me. I find it easy now we do we do it a bit longer” • Social aspects of the group • “Helpful to talk to other people” • Enjoyment of mindfulness practices • “I liked the three minute practice and I like the stone” • “Focusing on the soles of my feet” [Noted as something liked about the group] Themes from qualitative feedback

  21. Suggested improvements • Environmental • “Noises in the car park outside. Switching attention was not as easy” • Session / practice length • “The mindfulness [practice] was too long” • “Less time doing the soles of the feet activity” • “Not long enough” • “More sessions” • Types of practices • “Maybe change an activity”

  22. DISCUSSION

  23. The challenges • Six-week mindfulness group significantly improved participants ability to describe their feelings • Participants with ID reported a number of subjective benefits of mindfulness skills training • The social aspect of the group intervention is experienced as positive • Similar themes to those extracted from research in non-ID samples

  24. The Royal United Hospital DATE Service Conclusions • Group mindfulness interventions are acceptable and useful for adults with ID • Mindfulness can be adapted for adults with ID • Group format particularly well suited to adults with ID • Mindfulness may helps clients with ID feel more able to identify and express emotions

  25. Small sample size Use of unvalidated measures for evaluation with no previous testing on ID High participant drop-out No control condition No long term follow-up Limitations

  26. The Royal United Hospital DATE Service Our reflections • Variation in personalities and needs influencing the group process • Communicating abstract concepts • Home practice - Was more emphasis needed on what this was for? What more support needed ?

  27. The story so Future directions • Develop and validate a measure of mindfulness suitable for adults with ID • Measure change in reason for referral (for example, anxiety, rumination) • Add in additional practices earlier on (for example, mindful eating, breathing space) • Involve support network more - staff training • Extend the number of sessions to 8 • Conduct follow-up • Paper in preparation….

  28. Questions… Contact: linda.walz@sirona-cic.org.uk

  29. Key references • Khoury, B., Lecomte, T., Fortin, G., Masse, M., Therien, P., Bouchard, V., Chapleau, M. and Paquin, K et al. (2013). Mindfulness-based therapy: A comprehensive meta-analysis. Clinical Psychology Review 33(6), 763–71. • Robertson, B. (2010). The adaptation and application of mindfulness-based psychotherapeutic practices for individuals with intellectual disabilities. In R. Fletcher (Ed.) Psychotherapy for individuals with intellectual disability. Kingston, NY: NADD. • Singh, N. N., Lancioni, G.E., Winston, A. S. W., Adkins, A. D., Singh, J. and Singh, A. N. (2007). Mindfulness training assists individuals with moderate mental retardation to maintain their community placements. Behaviour Modification, 31(6), pp. 800-814. • Singh, N. N., Lancioni, G.E., Winston, A. S. W., Singh, A. N., Adkins, A. D. and Singh, J. (2008). Clinical and benefit-cost outcome of teaching a mindfulness-based procedure to adult offenders with intellectual disabilities. Behaviour Modification, 32(5), pp. 622-637. • Uma, K., Nagarathna, R., Nagendra, H. R., Vaidehi, S. and Seethalakshmi, R. (1989). The integrated approach of Yoga, a therapeutic tool for mentally retarded children: a one-year controlled study. Journal of Mental Deficiency Research, 33, pp. 415-421. • Donnelly, K., James, K., and Walz, L. Group-based mindfulness practice training for individuals with a learning difficulty: A pilot study. Clinical Psychology Forum (In press) • Chapman et al., (2013) The use of mindfulness with people with intellectual disabilities: A systematic review and narrative analysis. Mindfulness, 4, 179-189.

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