TMS Nearby

TMS Therapy in Garden City, Idaho

Compare 2 TMS Therapy clinics in Garden City, Idaho that offer care for treatment-resistant depression, OCD, and anxious depression. Review services, ratings, and contact details to find the right provider near you.
Mental health clinic illustration

Clinics

2 clinics shown

  • David Kent M.D.

    Psychiatric services are provided by Dr. David Kent at a Garden City practice on North Glenwood Street. The clinic's affiliation with NuMeTMS suggests potential availability of transcranial magnetic stimulation, though specific treatment modalities beyond general psychiatry are not confirmed in current listing data. Patients seeking TMS or other procedural interventions should contact the office directly to verify which services are offered and whether new patient appointments are available.

    No reviews yet
    View Details
  • NuMe TMS Clinics

    TMS therapy is provided at NuMe TMS Clinics on North Glenwood Street in Garden City for adults with treatment-resistant depression. The clinic specializes in transcranial magnetic stimulation protocols for patients whose symptoms have not responded adequately to antidepressant medications. Sessions are conducted in an outpatient setting, with treatment courses typically spanning several weeks of daily appointments. NuMe operates multiple locations across several states, with this Garden City office serving the Boise metropolitan area.

    No reviews yet
    View Details

About TMS Therapy

Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation, or TMS, is a non-invasive treatment that uses targeted magnetic pulses to stimulate areas of the brain involved in mood regulation. It's FDA-cleared for major depression, OCD, anxious depression, and smoking cessation, and is most often recommended for patients who haven't responded to multiple antidepressant medications.

A typical TMS course involves 30 to 36 daily sessions over six to nine weeks. Each session lasts 20 to 40 minutes depending on the protocol, and patients remain awake and alert throughout — most read, listen to music, or watch videos during treatment. There's no anesthesia, no sedation, and no recovery time, so patients can drive themselves home and return to work the same day.

Common side effects are mild and limited to scalp discomfort or headaches during the first week of treatment, which usually resolve on their own. Unlike medication, TMS doesn't cause weight gain, sexual dysfunction, or sedation.

Most major insurance plans, including Medicare and Medicaid, cover TMS for treatment-resistant depression after documentation of medication trials. Coverage for OCD and other indications varies by carrier. Clinics in our directory offering TMS are equipped with FDA-cleared devices from manufacturers including Neuronetics (NeuroStar), MagVenture, BrainsWay, and others.