“…Viable alternatives are SCED studies, which require fewer participants per study, are responsive to individual clients, flexible and practical (can be done by clinicians in community clinics as well as academic researchers), and experimentally sound, with generalizable results when accumulated over many studies showing replications across particular client characteristics, problems, components, settings, and so on—in other words, most suitable for effectiveness research (Birnbrauer, 1981; Blampied, 1999; Borckardt et al, 2008; Holman & Koerner, 2014; Morley, 2018; Persons, 2016). However, it should be noted that although SCEDs may be a more cost‐effective approach to component analyses, longitudinal and multi‐sequential studies require time and commitment for analysing multicomponent therapies (Riden et al, 2022).…”