Despite the considerable success obtained by modern humans in different areas, accidents and injuries originating from the current conditions in modern life are inevitable. These accidents and injuries can cause irreversible damage regardless of their causes. We sometimes refer to these injuries as diseases or chronic disorders (
1). Spinal cord injuries are examples of these disorders. A patient with spinal cord injury is a person whose spinal cord is injured from below the medulla oblongata to the end of the cauda equina, which is protected by the vertebral column. In fact, the closer the injury is to the brain, the higher the level and severity of the spinal cord injury are (
2). The average global rate of spinal cord injuries varies between 20 and 50 patients a year (
3). Car accidents, occupational accidents, natural disasters, and social conflicts (such as wars) are among the factors that may cause transient or permanent disabilities due to spinal cord injuries (
4).
As stated, a spinal cord injury can arise from many factors. However, regardless of its cause (s), a spinal cord injury has deep and considerable effects on the physical and psychological health and lifestyle of the patient (
5). Experts suggest that there is no certain treatment for neural lesions in patients suffering from spinal cord injuries (
6). Spinal lesions are among the problems that the rehabilitation team tries to solve due to the lack of specific treatments. Recently, rehabilitation has been mainly revolving around physical rehabilitation; however, the mental health of these individuals has not garnered enough attention. As the motor and physical problems of these patients are being recognized in the area of rehabilitation, their psychological problems, including their psychological rehabilitation, calls for more attention (
7).
Psychological inflexibility is one of the factors that cause psychological complications in chronic diseases (such as spinal cord injuries) and are taken into account in their psychological rehabilitation. Psychological flexibility is a unique function, prominent trait, or general cognitive ability enabling the individual to accept multiple ideas, change their understanding flexibly, and provide normal responses to environmental or pattern changes. Individuals with psychological flexibility use alternative explanations, positively reconstruct their intellectual framework, and accept challenging or stressful situations (
8). in other words, individuals with psychological flexibility adopt more appropriate and adaptive emotional regulation strategies (
9). Emotional regulation refers to strategies that can influence the degree and duration of the increase in emotions, their duration, and experience and expression of these emotions (
10). Moreover, emotional regulation refers to the process by which individuals influence which emotions they have, when they have them, and how they experience and express their feelings. Emotional regulation can be automatic or controlled, conscious or unconscious, and may affect one or more points in the emotion production process. In other words, emotion regulation is the ability to exert control over one’s emotional state. It may involve behaviors such as rethinking a challenging situation to reduce anger or anxiety, hiding visible signs of sadness or fear, or focusing on reasons to feel happy or calm (
11). Patients with spinal cord injuries experience more emotional regulation problems than healthy individuals (
12). In general, psychological inflexibility hinders emotional regulation (
13). Regarding the psychological rehabilitation treatments designed to reduce inflexibility, several treatments have been employed in the literature (
14). The mechanism of the effectiveness of these treatments is indirect. Considering the fundamental assumptions for each treatment, each one has led to a decrease in psychological inflexibility as an outcome rather than a direct impact, according to reports. In other words, these treatments did not intervene with flexibility. In turn, they modified factors such as problem-solving, cognitive distortions, and mindfulness. By changing these factors, psychological inflexibility decreased as an outcome rather than a direct impact. One of the psychotherapeutic methods designed for the rehabilitation of these patients is acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) (
15). This psychotherapeutic method directly focuses on improving psychological flexibility by virtue of its fundamental philosophy. Seemingly, ACT is suitable for treating inflexibility and emotional regulation because the fundamental philosophy of this approach revolves around reducing psychological inflexibility and the experience of emotions (
16). In other words, preventing experiential avoidance is the core of ACT. This principle aims to teach the patients how to quit the idea of suppressing anxiety, how to detach from unwanted, disturbing thoughts, and how to experience unpleasant emotions instead of avoiding them (
17). Moreover, ACT helps one to accept that a healthy person is not someone who does not have unpleasant emotions, but a healthy person is someone who can manage these emotions and experience a kind of life and accompany these emotions and practices such as mindfulness helps the person to exercise being with such emotions. This is an indirect process of ACT that works on emotions, which seems to be similar to the emotion regulation skill process.
The literature has shown that ACT has a positive effect on psychological flexibility and emotional regulation in different statistical communities. According to some studies, ACT plays an important role in the treatment of patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) by increasing psychological flexibility (
18). Another study used acceptance, commitment, and focus on psychological flexibility to help control weight (
19). In addition, ACT has been used for emotional regulation in patients with breast cancer (
20). The results have shown an increase in emotion regulation. Also, in another study, the use of this method in improving emotional regulation has been confirmed in dental patients (
21). Considering the effects of ACT on these variables in similar chronic diseases, it seems that considering the problems of patients with spinal cord injury in psychological flexibility and emotional regulation, we will examine the effects of ACT on these variables in these patients.