California PTSD Treatment Centers

California PTSD Treatment Centers

To Prevent Veteran Suicide and To Heal the Family When Prevention Fails

After talking with hundreds of Veterans and family members, we know that it is PTSD that kills Veterans. They do it via suicide, and that’s where the 22 Veteran suicides/day comes from. Now we are getting better at treating PTSD. There are ways to lower your likelihood of killing yourself that same day and for years after. Take a look and find a PTSD treatment center near you.

Note: we are constantly updating this so please be patient and check back often for new locations near you for PTSD treatments that work.

Find a California PTSD Treatment Center Near You

For several years, California has been at the forefront of PTSD treatment policy reform. In 2019, Oakland became the first city in the country to decriminalize a wide variety of treatments. “It’s time to take a health and science-oriented approach and step away from knee-jerk criminalization,” State Senator Scott Wiener tweeted on November 15, 2020.

Los Angeles California PTSD Treatment Centers

P Therapy Center

Pacific Brain Health Center

New U Therapy Center & Family Services

Trauma Therapy Treatment

Center for Relational Healing

K Clinics Los Angeles

The California Center for P Therapy

Trauma and Beyond PTSD Treatment Center

See More

San Francisco PTSD Treatment Centers

Center of Psychedelic Studies and Research

San Diego PTSD Treatment Centers

 

 

PTSD Definition

PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder) is a mental health problem that some people – soldiers and civilians – develop after experiencing or witnessing a life-threatening event, like combat, a natural disaster, a car accident, or sexual assault.

It’s normal to have upsetting memories, feel on edge, or have trouble sleeping after this type of event. At first, it may be hard to do normal daily activities, like go to work, go to school, or spend time with people you care about, but most people start to feel better after a few weeks or months. If it’s been longer than a few months and you’re still having symptoms, you may have PTSD.