Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP) Therapy in Chicago & Northbrook IL
ERP is grounded in a well-established understanding of how OCD maintains itself. Each time a compulsion is performed in response to an obsessive thought, the brain receives a message that the thought was dangerous and that the compulsion was necessary. ERP interrupts that cycle at its core.
ERP works by interrupting that loop. Exposures bring you into deliberate contact with the triggers. Response prevention means not performing the compulsion in response. Over time, through inhibitory learning, your nervous system learns that the feared outcome does not occur, and that anxiety itself is tolerable and temporary. The grip of OCD loosens.
– Danielle Doucette, PsyD, Midwest Counseling & Diagnostics
Exposures can be conducted in session or practiced independently between sessions, and they may be imaginal (engaging with a feared thought deliberately) or in-vivo (direct contact with a triggering situation). Your therapist monitors your progress closely and adjusts the hierarchy as treatment advances.
ERP requires genuine willingness. It is not comfortable work. But for people with OCD, it is consistently among the most effective interventions available, often producing meaningful change within a focused course of treatment.
- OCD across all subtypes including contamination, harm, religious, and relationship OCD
- Intrusive thoughts of a violent, sexual, or blasphemous nature
- Checking, counting, and ordering compulsions
- Pure-O (primarily obsessional OCD with covert mental compulsions)
- Health anxiety and illness phobia
- Specific phobias
- Social anxiety
- Perinatal OCD
At Midwest Counseling, our OCD-trained clinicians use ERP as the primary treatment structure, often integrating Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) for additional support around values and cognitive defusion.
What is ERP therapy used for?
ERP is primarily used to treat Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD). It is also applied to related conditions including health anxiety, specific phobias, social anxiety, and OCD-spectrum presentations. ERP is recommended as a first-line treatment for OCD by the International OCD Foundation and the American Psychological Association.
How is ERP different from regular exposure therapy?
Standard exposure therapy involves gradual contact with feared stimuli to reduce anxiety. ERP adds a specific second component: response prevention, meaning the person refrains from performing the compulsive behavior that would typically follow the exposure. This response prevention element is what specifically targets the OCD maintenance cycle.
Does ERP work for all types of OCD?
Yes. ERP is the evidence-based treatment across all OCD subtypes, including contamination OCD, harm OCD, religious or scrupulosity OCD, relationship OCD, and primarily obsessional presentations. The specific exposures are tailored to the individual’s obsessional content, but the underlying mechanism is consistent.
Is ERP therapy hard?
ERP requires a willingness to tolerate discomfort in the short term. Exposures are designed to provoke anxiety without the relief of compulsions, which is inherently uncomfortable. However, a skilled ERP therapist structures the work carefully, begins at a manageable level, and moves at a pace the person can sustain. Most people find it more tolerable than they expected.
Can ERP be done via telehealth?
Yes. Research supports the effectiveness of ERP delivered via telehealth. Imaginal and in-vivo exposures can both be conducted remotely, and many people find the telehealth format allows them to work on exposures in their natural environment more easily. Midwest Counseling offers ERP via telehealth across Illinois and many other states.
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