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Dive into the research topics where Christine Paprocki is active.

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Featured researches published by Christine Paprocki.


Behavior Modification | 2013

Enhancing Exposure and Response Prevention for OCD: A Couple-Based Approach

Jonathan S. Abramowitz; Donald H. Baucom; Michael G. Wheaton; Sara E. Boeding; Laura E. Fabricant; Christine Paprocki; Melanie S. Fischer

The effectiveness of individual therapy by exposure and response prevention (ERP) for obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD) is well established, yet not all patients respond well, and some show relapse on discontinuation. This article begins by providing an overview of the personal and interpersonal experiences of OCD, focusing on interpersonal processes that maintain OCD symptoms and interfere with ERP. The study then describes a couple-based treatment program that the authors have developed to enhance ERP for individuals with OCD who are in long-term relationships. This program involves psychoeducation, partner-assisted exposure therapy, couple-based interventions aimed at changing maladaptive relationship patterns regarding OCD (i.e., symptom accommodation), and general couple therapy. Three case examples are presented to illustrate the couple-based techniques used in this treatment program.


Behavior Therapy | 2013

Treating Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder in Intimate Relationships: A Pilot Study of Couple-Based Cognitive-Behavior Therapy

Jonathan S. Abramowitz; Donald H. Baucom; Sara E. Boeding; Michael G. Wheaton; Nicole D. Pukay-Martin; Laura E. Fabricant; Christine Paprocki; Melanie S. Fischer

Although cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) involving exposure and response prevention (ERP) is an established treatment for obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), not all patients respond optimally, and some show relapse upon discontinuation. Research suggests that for OCD patients in close relationships, targeting relationship dynamics enhances the effects of CBT. In the present study, we developed and pilot tested a 16-session couple-based CBT program for patients with OCD and their romantic partners. This program included (a) partner-assisted ERP, (b) techniques targeting maladaptive relationship patterns focal to OCD (e.g., symptom accommodation), and (c) techniques targeting non OCD-related relationship stressors. OCD, related symptoms, and relationship functioning were assessed at baseline, immediately following treatment (posttest), and at 6- and 12-month follow-up. At posttest, substantial improvements in OCD symptoms, relationship functioning, and depression were observed. Improvements in OCD symptoms were maintained up to 1year. Results are compared to findings from studies of individual CBT for OCD and discussed in terms of the importance of addressing interpersonal processes that maintain OCD symptoms.


Family Process | 2014

Couple-based interventions for psychopathology: a renewed direction for the field.

Donald H. Baucom; Jennifer M. Belus; Caroline B. Adelman; Melanie S. Fischer; Christine Paprocki

This article provides a rationale and empirical support for providing couple-based interventions when one partner in a relationship is experiencing individual psychopathology. Several investigations indicate that relationship distress and psychopathology are associated and reciprocally influence each other, such that the existence of relationship distress predicts the development of subsequent psychopathology and vice versa. Furthermore, findings indicate that for several disorders, individual psychotherapy is less effective if the client is in a distressed relationship. Finally, even within happy relationships, partners often inadvertently behave in ways that maintain or exacerbate symptoms for the other individual. Thus, within both satisfied and distressed relationships, including the partner in a couple-based intervention provides an opportunity to use the partner and the relationship as a resource rather than a stressor for an individual experiencing some form of psychological distress. The authors propose that a promising approach to including the partner in treatment involves (a) integrating intervention principles from empirically supported interventions for individual therapy for specific disorders with (b) knowledge of how to employ relationships to promote individual and dyadic change. Based on this logic, the article includes several examples to demonstrate how couple-based interventions can be focused on a specific type of psychopathology, including encouraging empirical findings for these interventions. The article concludes with recommendations for how clinicians and researchers can adapt their knowledge of couple therapy to assist couples in which one partner is experiencing notable psychological distress or diagnosable psychopathology.


Ethics & Behavior | 2014

When Personal and Professional Values Conflict: Trainee Perspectives on Tensions Between Religious Beliefs and Affirming Treatment of LGBT Clients

Christine Paprocki

At times the personal beliefs or values of graduate students in training programs for professional psychology can create complications in their providing therapy for certain patient populations. This issue has been brought to national attention recently through several prominent legal cases in which students have contested their expulsion from graduate programs due to their assertions that they were unable to treat clients in same-sex relationships because of their own religious beliefs. The goals of the current article are to (a) review the literature on values conflicts, (b) provide an analysis of how portions of our professional Ethics Code directly relate to this issue, (c) describe a developmentally sensitive theoretical framework that is designed to foster the growth of ethical reasoning over time, and (d) provide a forum for trainee perspectives on this issue based on trainees’ responses to an ethical vignette describing an intern struggling with a values conflict. The trainee quotations are used to structure a discussion of practical recommendations for how to handle values conflicts within the context of training and clinical supervision in professional psychology.


Women & Health | 2015

Rejection Sensitivity, Perceived Power, and HIV Risk in the Relationships of Low-Income Urban Women

Kathy R. Berenson; Christine Paprocki; Marget Thomas Fishman; Devika Bhushan; Nabila El-Bassel; Geraldine Downey

The psychological processes associated with HIV infection in long-term relationships differ from those operative in casual sexual encounters, and relatively little research has considered the aspects of personality applicable in the ongoing heterosexual relationships in which women are at greatest risk. Sensitivity to rejection has been linked with efforts to prevent rejection at a cost to the self and, therefore, may be relevant to the health risks that many women incur in relationships. We examined the association of rejection sensitivity with women’s sexual risk behavior in a sample of women at heightened risk for HIV exposure. Women in long-term heterosexual relationships (N = 159) were recruited for study participation in the hospital emergency room serving a low-income neighborhood in New York City, in 2001–2003. Rejection sensitivity and known HIV risk factors were assessed using verbally administered questionnaires. Rejection sensitivity was associated with lower perceived relationship power and, in turn, more frequent unprotected sex with a partner perceived to be at risk for HIV. These results held when controlling for other HIV risk factors including partner violence, economic dependence, and substance use. Understanding the association of rejection concerns with lower perceived personal power in relationships may be important for HIV prevention.


Family Process | 2017

Worried About us: Evaluating an Intervention for Relationship‐Based Anxiety

Christine Paprocki; Donald H. Baucom

Although romantic relationships are commonly a source of pleasure and comfort, for some individuals they can be a source of persistent anxiety. The aim of the current investigation was to explore the construct of relationship-based anxiety and to evaluate the effectiveness of a brief couple-based psychoeducational session for this issue. Common behavioral patterns and cognitive tendencies seen among individuals with relationship-based anxiety were examined, including excessive reassurance-seeking, self-silencing, and partner accommodation. In the current investigation, a single psychoeducational session was developed to address these maladaptive interactive patterns of behavior specifically. The session was administered to a sample of 21 couples and was found to decrease levels of reassurance-seeking and self-silencing significantly among individuals with relationship anxiety, and to decrease levels of maladaptive accommodation behaviors significantly in their partners.


Journal of Family Therapy | 2012

Couple-based interventions for psychopathology

Donald H. Baucom; Mark A. Whisman; Christine Paprocki


Behaviour Research and Therapy | 2013

Let me check that for you: Symptom accommodation in romantic partners of adults with Obsessive–Compulsive Disorder

Sara E. Boeding; Christine Paprocki; Donald H. Baucom; Jonathan S. Abramowitz; Michael G. Wheaton; Laura E. Fabricant; Melanie S. Fischer


Training and Education in Professional Psychology | 2014

Introducing the association of psychology training clinics' collaborative research network: A study on client expectancies

Jennifer L. Callahan; Scott A. Gustafson; Jessica B. Misner; Christine Paprocki; Eric M. Sauer; Karen K. Saules; Jennifer L. Schwartz; Joshua K. Swift; Douglas M. Whiteside; Kathryn Wierda; Erica H. Wise


Treatments for Psychological Problems and Syndromes | 2017

26. Treating Relationship Distress

Christine Paprocki; Donald H. Baucom

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Donald H. Baucom

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Melanie S. Fischer

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Jonathan S. Abramowitz

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Laura E. Fabricant

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Sara E. Boeding

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Jennifer M. Belus

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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