HealthApril 14, 2026

Edna Foa and Prolonged Exposure: A Short Course for Learners

Key Vocabulary

prolonged exposure/prəˈlɒŋd ɪkˈspəʊʒər/
A therapy that repeatedly and safely exposes patients to trauma memories and avoided situations
"Researchers tested prolonged exposure in controlled clinical trials."
imaginal exposure/ɪˈmædʒ.ɪ.nəl ɪkˈspəʊʒər/
Therapeutic practice of recounting traumatic memories aloud
"Imaginal exposure was carried out in the therapy session."
in vivo exposure/ɪn ˈviːvoʊ ɪkˈspəʊʒər/
Gradual, real-world facing of reminders or situations avoided after trauma
"In vivo exposure asked the patient to revisit a feared but safe place."
protocol/ˈproʊ.tə.kɒl/
A defined sequence of steps for clinical treatment or research
"Clinicians followed the treatment protocol during sessions."
PTSD/ˌpiː.tiːˈes.diː/
Post-traumatic stress disorder, a mental health condition after traumatic events
"Many studies measured changes in PTSD symptoms after therapy."

Listening

Edna Foa and Prolonged Exposure: A Short Course for Learners

Edna Foa, a clinical psychologist whose career reshaped trauma treatment, developed prolonged exposure therapy in the 1980s; the method, which she organized and tested, simplified complex exposure techniques into a structured program that clinicians could teach and replicate. By asking patients to revisit memories and to enter safe but avoided situations, prolonged exposure aimed to reduce pathological fear through repeated, controlled practice.

Prolonged exposure combines imaginal exposure—recounting the trauma aloud—and in vivo exposure—gradual real-world facing of reminders—and these components have been evaluated in randomized trials and clinical studies. Over decades, research literature has repeatedly found exposure-based protocols to reduce PTSD symptoms, and prolonged exposure has been integrated into training programs and some veterans’ services.

Foa taught at Temple and the Medical College of Pennsylvania before joining the University of Pennsylvania in 1998, where she directed the Center for the Treatment and Study of Anxiety. She wrote manuals that were translated into nine languages and earned major honors, including recognition on Time’s 2010 list of 100 most influential people; her influence extended from academic journals to clinic training worldwide.

She died on March 24, 2026, at Pennsylvania Hospital in Philadelphia from complications of pneumonia at the age of 88. If future research refines the mechanisms behind recovery, clinicians will still owe a debt to her systematic approach; it provided a replicable scaffold for trials and training. Her manuals and training workshops made it possible for therapists across many countries to apply the method with fidelity.

244 words

Quiz

1. When did she die?
2. Where did she direct a center?
3. In what decade did she develop prolonged exposure therapy?

Reading Practice

Read the article from the Listening section aloud. Your AI teacher will give you pronunciation feedback.

Discussion

1

Do you think learning to face fears could change how you handle stress? Why?

2

Have you ever followed a structured plan to overcome a worry? What worked?

3

What do you think about therapies that ask people to relive memories? Is it hard or helpful?

4

Would you take a training course to learn a new method if it had clear steps? Why or why not?

5

How do you feel when you hear about treatments that are used by clinics and veterans’ programs?

このコンテンツは英語学習を目的としたものであり、事実の正確性を保証するものではありません。