Understanding PTSD
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) develops following exposure to traumatic events — combat, assault, accidents, natural disasters, childhood abuse, or any experience that overwhelmed your capacity to cope. The condition is characterized by intrusive memories, nightmares, hypervigilance, emotional numbing, avoidance of trauma reminders, and disturbances in mood and cognition that can persist for months, years, or decades without appropriate treatment.
PTSD is not weakness. It is a neurobiological response to overwhelming experience — the brain’s alarm system stuck in the “on” position. At Psychiatry Telemed, we provide expert trauma-informed psychiatric care designed to reduce the neurobiological activation that drives PTSD symptoms, restore sleep, decrease intrusive experiences, and help you reclaim your life.
The NIMH estimates that approximately 3.6% of U.S. adults experienced PTSD in the past year, with lifetime prevalence significantly higher among women, veterans, and first responders.
The telepsychiatry model is uniquely suited for PTSD care — appointments happen in your safe space, not an unfamiliar clinical environment that may trigger hypervigilance.
Symptoms of PTSD
Intrusive Symptoms
Flashbacks, nightmares, intrusive memories of the traumatic event, and intense psychological or physiological distress when exposed to trauma reminders.
Avoidance
Avoiding thoughts, feelings, people, places, or situations associated with the trauma. This avoidance often narrows life significantly.
Negative Cognition & Mood
Persistent negative beliefs about self or the world, distorted blame, loss of interest, emotional detachment, and inability to experience positive emotions.
Hyperarousal
Hypervigilance, exaggerated startle response, difficulty concentrating, irritability, sleep disturbance, and self-destructive behavior.
PTSD Treatment at Psychiatry Telemed
First-line pharmacological treatments for PTSD include SSRIs — specifically sertraline (Zoloft) and paroxetine (Paxil), which have the strongest evidence base and FDA approval for PTSD. Your psychiatrist may also consider SNRIs, prazosin for trauma-related nightmares, and adjunctive medications targeting specific symptom clusters.
Medication creates the neurobiological conditions for deeper healing — reducing hyperarousal, improving sleep, decreasing intrusive symptoms, and restoring the capacity for emotional engagement. For many patients, medication management combined with trauma-focused psychotherapy produces optimal outcomes.
PTSD & Co-Occurring Conditions
PTSD frequently co-occurs with depression (approximately 50% overlap), substance use disorder, anxiety disorders, sleep disorders, and chronic pain. Our comprehensive evaluation identifies all co-occurring conditions for integrated treatment.
Causes and Risk Factors
PTSD develops through a complex interplay of biological, psychological, and environmental factors. Research from the National Institute of Mental Health indicates that psychiatric conditions involve disruptions in brain chemistry, neural circuitry, and stress-response systems — not personal weakness or moral failing. Understanding the causes helps inform treatment selection and reduces the stigma that often prevents people from seeking care.
Biological factors include genetic predisposition (psychiatric conditions often run in families), neurotransmitter imbalances affecting serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine systems, and structural or functional differences in brain regions involved in emotional regulation, threat detection, and reward processing. Environmental factors include adverse childhood experiences, chronic stress, trauma exposure, substance use, medical conditions, and significant life transitions.
At Psychiatry Telemed, your 60-minute psychiatric evaluation explores all of these contributing factors to develop a complete clinical understanding of your condition. This comprehensive approach is essential for accurate diagnosis and effective treatment planning.
Diagnosis at Psychiatry Telemed
Diagnosing ptsd requires careful clinical assessment by a board-certified psychiatrist who can differentiate it from conditions with overlapping symptoms. Many psychiatric conditions share surface-level similarities — for example, anxiety and ADHD can both present as difficulty concentrating, while bipolar depression and unipolar depression may look identical during depressive episodes but require fundamentally different treatment approaches.
Your psychiatrist uses structured clinical interview techniques, validated assessment tools, and diagnostic criteria from the DSM-5-TR to arrive at an accurate diagnosis. The evaluation considers symptom onset, duration, severity, functional impact, family history, medical conditions, current medications, and substance use. In some cases, a differential diagnosis may be warranted — a process of systematically ruling out similar conditions to ensure the most accurate determination.
Accurate diagnosis matters because it directly determines treatment selection. An incorrect diagnosis can lead to medications that are ineffective or even harmful — for example, prescribing antidepressants without a mood stabilizer in undiagnosed bipolar disorder can trigger manic episodes. This is why psychiatric evaluation by a board-certified specialist is essential.
Evidence-Based Treatment Options
Treatment for ptsd at Psychiatry Telemed follows evidence-based protocols grounded in the latest research from the American Psychiatric Association and peer-reviewed clinical literature. Our treatment approach is individualized — no two patients receive identical treatment plans, because no two patients have identical presentations.
Pharmacological treatment typically begins with medications that have the strongest evidence base for your specific condition and presentation. Your psychiatrist will explain the rationale behind each medication recommendation, discuss expected benefits and potential side effects, and set realistic expectations for the timeline of improvement. Most psychiatric medications require 2–8 weeks to reach full therapeutic effect, and dosage optimization often requires several adjustment cycles during monthly follow-up appointments.
For many patients, the combination of psychiatric medication management and psychotherapy produces superior outcomes compared to either approach alone. Your psychiatrist can help determine whether adding a therapist — for CBT, DBT, or other modalities — would benefit your specific situation, and can coordinate with your therapist when appropriate.
Living With PTSD
Managing ptsd is an ongoing process, not a one-time fix. With consistent psychiatric care, appropriate medication management, and the right support system, most patients experience significant symptom improvement and meaningful restoration of daily functioning. Many patients describe a turning point — the moment when treatment begins working and they realize they don’t have to live the way they’ve been living.
Between monthly appointments, patients are encouraged to maintain consistent sleep schedules, engage in regular physical activity, limit alcohol and substance use, practice stress management techniques, and stay connected with supportive relationships. Your psychiatrist will provide specific lifestyle guidance tailored to your condition and treatment plan during your appointments.
The telepsychiatry model supports ongoing management by removing barriers that often lead patients to skip appointments — no commute, no waiting room, no taking time off work. Consistent attendance at monthly follow-ups is one of the strongest predictors of long-term treatment success.
When to Seek Help
If you’re experiencing symptoms of ptsd that are affecting your work performance, relationships, sleep, appetite, concentration, or overall quality of life, professional psychiatric evaluation is warranted. You don’t need to reach a crisis point before seeking help — in fact, earlier intervention consistently produces better outcomes and prevents acute conditions from becoming chronic.
Many patients come to us unsure whether their symptoms are “bad enough” to warrant psychiatric care. The answer is almost always yes — if your symptoms are causing distress or functional impairment, you deserve expert evaluation and treatment. According to the SAMHSA, the average delay between symptom onset and treatment for mental health conditions in the United States is 11 years. We exist to close that gap.
Contact Psychiatry Telemed or call (689) 399-2500 today. Most new patients are seen within 1–3 business days. Your initial 60-minute evaluation is $200, and monthly follow-ups are $100. No insurance required, no referral needed, no waiting weeks for an appointment.
The Impact of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) on Daily Life
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) affects far more than the symptoms listed in a diagnostic manual. Patients frequently describe the ripple effects across every dimension of their lives — relationships strained by irritability or withdrawal, careers undermined by difficulty concentrating or maintaining consistent performance, physical health neglected when emotional energy is depleted, and a pervasive sense that life has become smaller, harder, and less rewarding than it should be.
For many patients, the most insidious effect of post-traumatic stress disorder (ptsd) is the erosion of identity — the gradual loss of connection to the person they were before symptoms took hold. Activities that once brought joy feel meaningless. Relationships that once felt easy become exhausting. Goals that once felt achievable seem impossibly distant. This is not a personal failure; it is the neurobiological impact of an untreated psychiatric condition on motivation, reward processing, and emotional connection.
The good news is that these effects are reversible with appropriate treatment. As psychiatric medication begins working — typically within 2–8 weeks — patients consistently report not just symptom reduction, but a gradual return to themselves. Energy returns. Interest in activities re-emerges. Relationships begin to feel manageable again. The world, which had contracted to the size of their symptoms, starts to expand back toward its full dimensions.
Understanding Your Treatment Options
At Psychiatry Telemed, treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder (ptsd) is individualized based on your specific symptom profile, severity, treatment history, co-occurring conditions, and personal preferences. There is no single “best” treatment — there is only the best treatment for you, and finding it requires the kind of careful, ongoing clinical attention that our monthly medication management appointments are designed to provide.
First-line pharmacological options for post-traumatic stress disorder (ptsd) are selected based on the strongest available evidence from clinical trials and practice guidelines published by the American Psychiatric Association. Your psychiatrist will explain the mechanism of action of any recommended medication, discuss the expected timeline for improvement, review potential side effects, and answer every question you have before any prescription is written.
If your first medication does not produce adequate results — which occurs in a meaningful minority of patients and is not a sign that you cannot be helped — your psychiatrist will systematically explore alternatives. This may include dosage adjustment, switching to a different medication within the same class, switching to a different medication class entirely, augmentation strategies (adding a second medication to enhance the first), or combination approaches that target multiple symptom dimensions simultaneously.
Throughout this process, monthly follow-up appointments provide the structured monitoring that effective treatment demands. Your psychiatrist tracks objective and subjective measures of improvement, watches for emerging side effects, and makes data-informed decisions about your treatment trajectory. This iterative, precision-driven approach is the hallmark of expert psychiatric medication management — and it is what distinguishes care at Psychiatry Telemed from assembly-line prescribing.