Most people associate ERP Exposure and Response Prevention with OCD. And they are right that ERP is the gold-standard treatment for OCD. But the reach of ERP extends well beyond OCD.


Every anxiety disorder is maintained by the same core mechanism: avoidance. You feel anxious, you avoid or escape, the anxiety temporarily drops, and the brain learns to treat the avoided situation as genuinely dangerous. ERP interrupts that cycle regardless of which anxiety disorder is driving it.

At Anxiety & OCD Treatment Specialists, we use ERP-based treatment across the full range of anxiety disorders. Understanding how ERP applies to your specific condition helps you know what treatment will look like and why it works.

In-person sessions are provided in Tampa and virtual sessions are available throughout Florida and New York.

Quick Answer: What Is OCD in Children?

ERP for anxiety works by helping people gradually face the situations, sensations, thoughts, or triggers they have been avoiding without using the safety behaviors, reassurance-seeking, or escape strategies that have been managing the anxiety. Each condition has its own exposure targets and its own version of ‘response prevention.’ The result in every case is the same: the brain learns that the feared situation is manageable, the anxiety decreases without avoidance, and the anxiety disorder loses its grip on daily life.

ERP Is the Core Treatment for Every Anxiety Disorder, Here Is How

Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD)

GAD involves persistent, excessive worry across multiple life domains work, health, relationships, the future. The response prevention component for GAD targets worry itself: the compulsive mental reviewing, the reassurance-seeking, and the planning behaviors that feel like they are managing the worry but are actually feeding it.

Exposures for GAD involve sitting with uncertainty deliberately not seeking reassurance, not checking, not over-preparing and tolerating the discomfort of not knowing until the anxiety decreases on its own.

Social Anxiety Disorder

Social anxiety is maintained by two things: avoidance of social situations and safety behaviors used within those situations avoiding eye contact, rehearsing what to say, leaving early, staying on the edges of groups. Both maintain the anxiety by preventing the brain from learning that social situations are manageable.

ERP for social anxiety involves entering feared social situations without the safety behaviors having conversations without mentally rehearsing them first, speaking up in groups without scripting every word, tolerating the discomfort of potential judgment without escaping. The exposure hierarchy progresses from lower-stakes social situations toward the ones most avoided.

Panic Disorder

Panic disorder has two distinct exposure components that most treatments miss if they are not truly ERP-based.

The first is situational exposure returning to the places or situations where panic has occurred and been avoided. Driving on highways, going to crowded stores, riding elevators whatever the person has been avoiding because a panic attack happened there.

The second and most important is interoceptive exposure. This involves deliberately inducing the physical sensations of panic racing heart, dizziness, shortness of breath through exercises like spinning in a chair, breathing through a coffee straw, or running in place. This teaches the brain that the sensations of panic are not dangerous, which removes the fear-of-fear cycle that drives panic disorder.

Most therapists who treat panic disorder skip interoceptive exposure entirely. This is one of the clearest signs that the treatment is not specialist-level ERP.

As long as you fear your panic attacks, you will continue to have them.

Specific Phobias

Phobias are perhaps the clearest application of ERP outside of OCD. The exposure hierarchy is built around the specific feared object or situation heights, spiders, needles, driving, flying and the person progresses up the hierarchy until the anxiety response has significantly weakened. Response prevention means no escape, no safety behaviors, and no avoidance at each step.

Phobias respond particularly quickly to ERP often in as few as 6 to 10 sessions. The focused, singular nature of the fear means the hierarchy is clear and progress is rapid.

Health Anxiety

Health anxiety is maintained by checking behaviors examining the body, Googling symptoms, seeking reassurance from doctors and by avoiding medical situations that trigger fear. ERP for health anxiety involves blocking these checking and reassurance behaviors while also gradually approaching the medical situations or health topics that have been avoided.

Health anxiety is an OCD obsession, and the ERP approach is correspondingly similar. The compulsions (checking, reassurance-seeking) are identified and systematically reduced while the person learns to tolerate uncertainty about their health without performing the compulsive behaviors that temporarily quiet the anxiety.

Separation Anxiety

Separation anxiety in children and adults is maintained by the behaviors that prevent separation from happening: refusing to leave, insisting on contact, seeking repeated reassurance that the attachment figure is safe. ERP for separation anxiety involves graduated practice of separation starting with brief, manageable separations and building up while blocking reassurance-seeking and the safety behaviors that have been allowing avoidance.

For children with separation anxiety, parent involvement is essential. Parents are coached on how to support exposures at home without inadvertently reinforcing avoidance a form of family-based ERP that produces significantly better outcomes than individual treatment alone.

How ERP for Anxiety Differs From ERP for OCD

The core mechanism is the same. The specific application differs in important ways:

ERP for OCDERP for Anxiety Disorders
Targets obsessions and compulsions specificallyTargets feared situations, sensations, or triggers
Response prevention focuses on blocking ritualsResponse prevention focuses on blocking avoidance and safety behaviors
Mental compulsions are a major focusBehavioral avoidance is often the primary target
Family accommodation is almost always addressedFamily involvement varies by condition and presentation
The feared outcome is often internally definedThe feared outcome is often a specific external situation
Cognitive challenging is generally not usedSome cognitive work may support exposure for certain anxiety conditions

The most common mistake in anxiety treatment is confusing anxiety management with anxiety treatment. Deep breathing, mindfulness, grounding techniques, and coping skills are all legitimate tools for managing anxiety in a moment. But they do not treat the underlying disorder. ERP treats the disorder by changing what the brain learns from anxiety, not just how it responds to it in the short term.

Safety Behaviors, The Hidden Avoidance

One of the most important concepts in ERP for anxiety is the safety behavior a subtle form of avoidance that allows the person to enter an anxiety-provoking situation while still protecting themselves from the feared outcome. Safety behaviors feel like coping. They are actually maintaining the anxiety disorder.

Real ERP for anxiety identifies and targets safety behaviors as specifically as it targets the more obvious avoidance. Without eliminating safety behaviors, exposures produce only partial learning the brain updates to ‘this was manageable with my safety behavior’ rather than ‘this was manageable.’ The safety behavior has to go for the learning to be complete.

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Recovery and remission are possible, and effective treatment is available.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, and this is one of the most important things to understand about ERP. The treatment was developed alongside OCD research but its principles apply to every anxiety disorder because all anxiety disorders are maintained by avoidance. If you have generalized anxiety, social anxiety, panic disorder, a phobia, health anxiety, or separation anxiety ERP is one of the most effective treatments available for your specific condition.

‘Facing your fears’ is a casual description of something that is actually a precise clinical process. Real ERP involves a structured hierarchy built collaboratively around your specific feared situations, a deliberate and systematic approach to response prevention, and carefully designed between-session practice that extends the learning from the therapy room into real life. It is not simply ‘do the scary thing.’ It is a structured, monitored, supported process of changing what the brain learns from anxiety one step at a time.

Exposure conducted without proper response prevention or with safety behaviors allowed can produce partial or incomplete learning that feels discouraging. Exposures done too aggressively without adequate hierarchy-building can overwhelm rather than challenge. These are not properties of ERP itself they are properties of ERP done incorrectly. Real ERP, delivered by a trained specialist with a proper hierarchy and consistent response prevention, does not worsen anxiety. It produces steady, measurable improvement.

ERP Works for Anxiety, When It Is Done Right.

Whatever your anxiety disorder panic, social anxiety, GAD, phobias, health anxiety, separation anxiety ERP is the most effective behavioral treatment available. At Anxiety & OCD Treatment Specialists, we are trained in ERP across the full range of anxiety conditions. We begin exposure practice at session two. We target safety behaviors from the start. And we get results quickly.

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