Contextualist Perspectives in the Treatment of Antisocial Behaviors and Offending: A Comparative Review of FAP, ACT, DBT, and MDT

Trauma, Violence & Abuse
J Carmelo Visdómine-Lozano

Abstract

This article presents a comparative review of the application of four contextualist therapies in the treatment of antisocial behavior and offending. The therapies reviewed are functional analytic psychotherapy (FAP), acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT), dialectical behavior therapy (DBT), and mode deactivation therapy (MDT). A descriptive and comparative review was conducted through a search carried out in both general and specific databases related to each therapy. We included a total of 44 studies treating any type of antisocial behavior or offending. Results show that these interventions have been used to treat challenging behavioral patterns, inmates' institutional behaviors, exhibitionism, at-risk adolescents' aggressive conducts, and offending behaviors performed by juveniles who committed robbery and/or serious sexual offenses. The main conclusions are that the four therapies show very positive outcomes: Although FAP and ACT have been used more sparsely, DBT and MDT have been employed in a larger number of interventions and using more controlled comparative designs. The therapeutic components that seem to be relevant to understanding in a transversal way how changes in behavior are achieved are acceptance/validation ...Continue Reading

References

Aug 5, 2003·Journal of Traumatic Stress·Rebekah G Bradley, Diane R Follingstad
Aug 4, 2007·Journal of Clinical Psychology·Neharika Chawla, Brian Ostafin
Sep 29, 2009·Behavioral Sciences & the Law·Deborah SheltonRobert L Trestman
Aug 19, 2011·International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics·Christopher C Afendulis, Daniel P Kessler
Jun 24, 2014·Journal of Contextual Behavioral Science·Ryan C ShoreyGregory L Stuart
Mar 11, 2015·Clinical Psychology Review·Erica L Birkley, Christopher I Eckhardt

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