“…With PTSD, the core components of exposure therapy programs are imaginal exposure, or repeated recounting of the traumatic memory, and in vivo exposure, the repeated confrontation with trauma-related situations and objects that evoke excessive anxiety. Across several well-conducted studies, between 40 and 87% of participants no longer meet criteria for PTSD after 9-15 sessions of exposure therapy alone (eg, Foa et al, 1991(eg, Foa et al, , 1999Marks et al, 1998;Paunovic and Ost, 2001;Resick et al, 2002;Tarrier et al, 1999;Taylor et al, 2003) and exposure therapy combined with either stress inoculation training (Foa et al, 1999) or cognitive therapy (eg, Bryant et al, 2003b;Marks et al, 1998;Paunovic and Ost, 2001). By comparison, less than 5% of participants lose the PTSD diagnosis after a comparable period of time with no intervention (ie, waitlist control) and 10-55% of participants after receiving an active control treatment such as supportive counseling (Bryant et al, 2003b;Foa et al, 1991) or relaxation (Marks et al, 1998;Taylor et al, 2003) lose the PTSD dianosis.…”