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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2012 Jun 1.
Published in final edited form as: J Anxiety Disord. 2011 Feb 21;25(5):654–660. doi: 10.1016/j.janxdis.2011.02.006

Table 2.

Intercept and slope predicting outcome and discontinuation the first three exposures

Intercept Linear Change Dropout


Est. S.E. Z Est. S.E. Z Est. S.E. Z

E1 Rise -.023 .054 -0.44 0.11 .011 1.02 -.005 .002 -1.97*
    Peak .106 .051 2.09* -.011 .009 -1.24 .003 .003 1.21
    Change .044 .052 0.84 -.007 .007 -0.98 .005 .002 2.39*

E2 Rise -.141 .050 -2.85* -.026 .011 -2.37* -.003 .003 -0.99
    Peak .197 .062 3.17* .013 .016 0.85 .003 .003 0.91
    Change .133 .085 1.57 .009 .016 0.54 -.003 .003 -0.97

E3 Rise -.122 .079 -1.55 .009 .019 0.45 -.002 .004 -0.05
    Peak .159 .064 2.50* -.004 .028 -0.14 .006 .006 0.88
    Change .172 .078 2.20* -.012 .026 -0.45 .004 .005 0.80

Notes: Intercept = estimated STAI-S score at session 12. Est.=Parameter Estimate; S.E.=Standard Error; Z=standardized z-score. Two-tailed Z > 1.96 is significant at p < .05.

*

p < 05. All analyses controlled for initial severity of primary diagnosis.