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Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 10, 2025

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The Exposure Guide: A Practical Measure of Exposure Quality.

Kristen M Benito1, Jennifer A Herren1, Lesley A Norris1

  • 1Bradley Hospital, East Providence, RI; The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University.

Behavior Therapy
|April 26, 2025
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

A new quality measure for exposure therapy, the Exposure Guide (EG), shows strong initial reliability and validity in pediatric OCD clinical trials. This tool aids in monitoring evidence-based interventions quality.

Keywords:
adherencecompetenceexposure therapymeasurementprocess

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Area of Science:

  • Psychiatry and Behavioral Science
  • Clinical Psychology
  • Health Services Research

Background:

  • Quality monitoring is crucial for effective evidence-based interventions (EBIs).
  • Validated quality measures are scarce for many treatments, including exposure therapy.
  • This gap hinders consistent application in research and practice.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To examine the initial psychometric properties of the Exposure Guide (EG), a brief quality measure for exposure therapy.
  • To assess the reliability and construct validity of the EG in a pediatric obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) clinical trial sample.

Main Methods:

  • The Exposure Guide (EG) was developed using behavioral principles and expert input.
  • Psychometric properties were evaluated in 103 youth across 368 therapy sessions from randomized clinical trials.
  • Inter-rater reliability and correlations with a validated coding system were analyzed.

Main Results:

  • The EG demonstrated good to excellent inter-rater reliability (ICCs .64–1.00).
  • EG items strongly correlated with parallel variables from a time-intensive coding system.
  • Variance components analysis revealed variability across therapists, patients, and time.

Conclusions:

  • The Exposure Guide (EG) shows promising initial reliability and construct validity for exposure therapy quality assessment in clinical trials.
  • Further research is needed to establish its psychometric properties in practice settings.
  • Future studies should explore factors influencing therapy quality.