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EMDR in Salida, California

Compare 2 EMDR clinics in Salida, California that offer care for PTSD, trauma, and anxiety. Review services, ratings, and contact details to find the right provider near you.
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Clinics

2 clinics shown

  • LifeStance Therapists & Psychiatrists Salida

    LifeStance operates an outpatient mental health clinic in Salida, providing psychiatric services and counseling for children, adults, couples, and families. The practice, located on Pirrone Court near Highway 99, offers medication management through psychiatrists and therapy through licensed counselors. Treatment focuses on mood disorders, anxiety, relationship issues, and child behavioral concerns, with no indication that TMS, ketamine, or esketamine services are currently available at this location.

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  • Tamela Dunn, Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner

    Tamela Dunn is a psychiatric nurse practitioner seeing patients at a LifeStance Health office on Pirrone Court in Salida, providing medication management and psychiatric evaluations for adults with mood disorders, anxiety, and substance use concerns. The practice operates as part of an outpatient mental health clinic offering both individual psychiatric care and counseling services. Specific procedural treatments such as TMS or ketamine are not listed; patients requiring those interventions would need confirmation of availability or referral to specialized providers.

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About EMDR

Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing — EMDR — is a structured therapy designed to help patients process traumatic memories and reduce their lingering emotional charge. It's the most extensively researched trauma therapy alongside cognitive processing therapy and prolonged exposure, and is recommended by the World Health Organization, Department of Veterans Affairs, and American Psychiatric Association as a first-line treatment for PTSD.

EMDR sessions follow an eight-phase protocol. During the core processing phases, the therapist guides the patient through brief sessions of bilateral stimulation — typically eye movements, but sometimes alternating taps or sounds — while the patient holds a traumatic memory in mind. Over repeated sessions, the memory's emotional intensity diminishes and adaptive insights emerge. Patients describe the result as the memory becoming "smaller" or "more distant" without losing its factual content.

A full EMDR course varies — some single-incident traumas resolve in 6 to 12 sessions, while complex trauma or PTSD with multiple events may require months of work. Sessions are usually 60 to 90 minutes weekly.

Most insurance plans cover EMDR with licensed therapists trained in the protocol. Clinics in our directory list practitioners with formal EMDR training through approved certification programs.