Willingness and Acceptance of Delusions Scale: early findings on a new instrument for psychological flexibility
Date
2018
Embargo
Advisor
Coadvisor
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Language
English
Alternative Title
Abstract
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and related constructs (experiential avoidance, cognitive defusion and committed action) have recently
been applied to psychosis. However, with a few exceptions, this application has not resulted in symptom-specific assessment instruments. The
current work intends to develop a measure for assessing experiential
acceptance regarding delusions (the Willingness and Acceptance for
Delusions Scale) and to conduct a preliminary study of its psychometric
properties in a sample of 91 patients with a psychotic disorder, mostly
male (87%), single (86%), unemployed (44%), presenting with a schizophrenia diagnosis (71%), and currently with delusions (last week – 52%).
Exploratory factor analysis yielded a three-factor structure (Acceptance
and Action, Non-entanglement and Non-struggling), which adequately
fitted the data and reflected the intended constructs within an
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy framework. Scores from all factors
achieved adequate reliability and were associated with mindfulness and
satisfaction with life. These early findings point to the internal and
construct validity and reliability of the scores of the WADS. Although
further research into the scale’s psychometric properties, particularly
construct validity, is needed, its use in research and clinical practice
with psychosis populations seems substantiated.
Keywords
Acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT), Ddelusions, Psychosis, Willingness
Document Type
Journal article
Publisher Version
10.1080/17522439.2018.1502340
Dataset
Citation
Martins, M. J., Castilho, P., Macedo, A., Pereira, A. T., Vagos, P., Carvalho, D., Bajouco, M., Madeira, N., Nogueira, V., & Barreto Carvalho, C. (2018). Willingness and Acceptance of Delusions Scale: early findings on a new instrument for psychological flexibility. Psychosis, 10(3), 198-207. Doi: 10.1080/17522439.2018.1502340. Disponível no Repositório UPT, http://hdl.handle.net/11328/3495
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TID
Designation
Access Type
Restricted Access