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EFT making an impact in the NHS & Beyond
Dr Elizabeth BoathDr Rani Bora & Pat Ballantyne
What's the evidence base for EFT? 78 research studies of EFT18 randomised controlled trials & more on the way 1 meta analysis (Gilomen & Lee, 2015)4 systematic reviews of EFT
(Feinstein, 2008; Feinstein, 2012; Boath et al., 2011, Church 2013) 2 more systematic reviews coming soon
(Boughey et al, Cowap et al.,)Publications in pressPublications currently being written
Meta analysis (Gilomen & Lee, 2015)
Limitations of studiesE.g. poor quality studies, lack of clear randomisation
procedures, lack of treatment fidelity measures ‘ These limitations not withstanding, EFT appears to
produce an effect’ (Gilomen & Lee, 2015)
Positive effect for EFT ‘the majority of studies (12) indicate that EFT is better than no
treatment or waitlist controls’ (Gilomen & Lee, 2015)
Sandwell
Chesterfield
Forth Valley
Devon
Humber
Yorkshire
Poole
Edinburgh
Tyneside
EFT success in the NHSProfessor Tony Stewart (AKA Tapping Tony!)• Sandwell PCT• First ever dedicated NHS EFT service • Ethical approval and evaluated the service• Outcome measures used by NHS
– CORE10 / WEMWBS / Rosenberg Self-Esteem / HADS
• Subsequently, trained 25 existing counselling staff to continue to deliver the service
Stewart A, Boath E, Carryer A, Walton I, Hill L. Can Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT) be effective in the treatment of emotional conditions? Results of a service evaluation in Sandwell. Journal of Psychological Therapies in Primary Care 2013;2:71-84.
39 clients gave consent, and 31 (79.5%) completed therapy 30 (76.9%) female
Mean age 45.37 (range 18-76) 31 (79.5%) White British Mean number of sessions attended was 5.05 (median 4.0; range 2-
17)Clients completing therapy also invited for 3-month follow-up
Sandwell EFT Service Evaluation
Results – Pre/Post
Results – 3 Month Follow-Up
MeasurementScale
Mean score Pre-EFT
Mean scoreFollow-up
SD(Difference)
P value(* Significant)
N=
CORE-10 18.71 7.14 6.37 0.003 * 7
WEMWBS 40.00 53.29 11.27 0.021 * 7
Rosenberg Self-Esteem 14.29 22.43 6.45 0.016 * 7
HADS Anxiety 14.25 5.50 4.03 0.068 4
HADS Depression 8.50 2.75 2.50 0.019 * 4
HADS Total 22.75 8.25 5.32 0.068 4
EFT in the NHS the successes Who, what and where?
Dr Peter Leakey– Chesterfield, North Derbyshire– Retired Head of District Psychology Service / Head of Health Psychology – Didn't ask - just did it!
• His legacy...Very supportive, encouraged innovation – Energy Modalities – logosynthesis, EFT, TAT, NLP etc– Masha Bennett
Research EFT v Sham EFT Both worked! But what that paper doesn't reveal...Sham group came back again and Peter treated them successfully with EFT
More EFT successesTherese McGoldrick
– NHS Forth Valley– Head of Psychological Services – Team all trained in EFT and EMDR– Pioneered EMDR in Scotland
Research EFT versus EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitisation and Programming in treating PSTD (Karatzias et al., 2011)
– EFT and EMDR both produced significant clinical gains– EMDR larger effect size, but non-significant – What that paper does not reveal...patients preferred EFT
Hear all about more EFT in the NHS...later
Susie Foster – GP in Yorkshire– Running a weekly EFT clinic in her GP practice– Colleagues supportive, long waits for psychological services– 10 minutes NHS time, 20 minutes own time!– Cost-effective – Homework – Pat Ballantyne’s Tapping scripts
Research on the impact of EFT for patients with chronic pain – ‘Piloting the Pain’ with Gwyneth Moss – Funded by CCG (Clinical Commissioning Group)– Hear all about it later
Therese McGoldrick
…and there’s more
Dr Rani Bora
..and last but by no means least
Pat Ballantyne