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Trauma Therapy

Promptd brings the quality and transparency that the mental health domain deserves.

Anas & Viktoriya

Co-founders of Promptd

Viktoriya
Anas

Find Trauma Therapy in Westmount

Trauma therapy has more specialized approaches than most areas of mental health, and the right one depends on what happened, when it happened, and how it shows up now. Promptd lists trauma and PTSD therapists across Canada by treatment method so you can match the approach to your situation.

106 Trauma Therapy specialists in Westmount

Samantha Lantagne, Canadian Certified Counsellor - View listing
Samantha Lantagne
Canadian Certified Counsellor, Guidance Counsellor
Westmount
OnlineIn-Person

Anxiety, Grief, Chronic pain, Eating disorders, Divorce, Life transitions
Lindsey Ackerman, Certified Canadian Counsellor - View listing
Lindsey Ackerman
Certified Canadian Counsellor, Drama Therapist, Naturopath
Westmount
In-PersonOnline

Anger, Anxiety, Autism / ASD, Trauma, Eating disorders, Depression
Member of MIT-Team
Reduced rates from $130Low income
Natasha Edwards, Canadian Certified Counsellor - View listing
Natasha Edwards
Canadian Certified Counsellor, Drama Therapist, Naturopath
Westmount
In-PersonOnline

Anxiety, Trauma, Anger, Immigration, Children, Teens
Member of MIT-Team
Reduced rates from $90Low income
Nathaniel Nurse, Registered Social Worker - View listing
Nathaniel Nurse
Registered Social Worker
Westmount
OnlineIn-Person

Anger, Depression, Grief, Life transitions, Anxiety, Teens
Member of MIT-Team
Shimmon Hutchinson, Registered Social Worker - View listing
Shimmon Hutchinson
Registered Social Worker, Founder/Owner
Westmount
In-PersonOnline

Anger, Trauma, Anxiety, Co-parenting, Divorce, Addiction
Member of MIT-Team
Reduced rates from $95IVAC
Verity Ly, Psychotherapist - View listing
Verity Ly
Psychotherapist, Couple and Family Therapist, Social Worker
Westmount
In-PersonOnline

Anxiety, Depression, Trauma, Emotion regulation, Burnout, EFT
Member of openspaceclinic
Taylor Zidel, Canadian Certified Counsellor - View listing
Taylor Zidel
Canadian Certified Counsellor, Clinical Counsellor, Guidance Counsellor
Westmount
OnlineIn-Person

ADHD, Anxiety, Eating disorders, Chronic pain, Depression, Grief
Erika Gentile, Neuropsychologist - View listing
Erika Gentile
Neuropsychologist, Clinical Psychologist
Westmount
In-PersonOnline

Psychoeducational, ADHD, Autism / ASD, Anxiety, Burnout, Chronic pain
Member of openspaceclinic

Provider overview

106

Practitioners available

83

Accepting new clients

$162/h

Average session price

16h

Average response time

4

Specialties: Therapy, Assessment, Family mediation and Speech therapy

12

Languages spoken

Looking for trauma therapy in Westmount?

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Person reflecting on therapy options

Trauma Therapy pricing in Westmount by professional title

ProfessionAvg. hourly rate
Social Worker$156/hr
Counsellor$161/hr
Psychologist$199/hr
Psychotherapist$163/hr
Sexologist$125/hr
Psychoeducator$125/hr

Trauma Therapy pricing near Westmount compared to nearby cities

CityAvg. hourly rate
Westmount$169/hr
Montreal$160/hr
Outremont$151/hr
Mont-Royal$155/hr
Côte-Saint-Luc$175/hr

Trauma Therapy provider breakdown by gender in Westmount

Female (80%)
Male (17%)
Other (3%)

Trauma Therapy provider breakdown by service mode in Westmount

In-person and online (80%)
Online only (14%)
In-person only (6%)

Your questions, answered

What type of counselling is best for trauma?

The APA strongly recommends cognitive processing therapy (CPT) and prolonged exposure (PE) for PTSD, both of which are structured CBT therapy variants. EMDR therapy is conditionally recommended and works well for many people, especially those who prefer less verbal processing. The best fit depends on whether your trauma is a single event or repeated, how long ago it occurred, and which symptoms are most disruptive. Your therapist should be able to explain why they recommend a specific approach for your situation.

What is trauma-informed therapy?

Trauma-informed therapy is a philosophy, not a single technique. It means the provider prioritizes safety, choice, collaboration, and cultural sensitivity in everything they do. This is different from trauma-focused therapy, which is a specific treatment that directly targets traumatic memories and their effects. Most good therapists are trauma-informed regardless of specialty. If you need active trauma processing, look for someone who is also trauma-focused and trained in a named method.

What are the 7 trauma responses?

The most commonly cited trauma responses are fight (aggression, control), flight (avoidance, restlessness), freeze (shutdown, inability to act), and fawn (people-pleasing, over-accommodating). Expanded frameworks add flop (physical collapse or going limp), flooding (emotional overwhelm), and fatigue (chronic exhaustion as a protective response). These are nervous system survival strategies, not personality traits. If anxiety-driven responses like flight or flooding are dominant, anxiety therapists specialists can complement trauma-focused work.

Why is trauma therapy so hard?

Processing trauma means engaging with material your brain has been actively avoiding. This creates temporary discomfort as your nervous system learns the memories are no longer dangerous. Good therapists pace this carefully and build stabilization skills first so the difficulty stays manageable. Discomfort during treatment is different from being retraumatized. If emotional regulation is a barrier to starting, DBT therapy skills can help build distress tolerance before deeper processing begins.

How long does trauma therapy take?

APA-recommended approaches for PTSD typically run 6 to 16 sessions depending on the method: cognitive processing therapy averages 12 sessions, prolonged exposure runs about 12 weekly sessions, and EMDR ranges from 6 to 12. Single-event trauma resolves faster than complex or childhood trauma, which may require months of stabilization before processing begins. If low mood or shutdown is prominent alongside trauma symptoms, depression counselling support can run in parallel.

What is the difference between PTSD and complex PTSD?

PTSD typically develops from a specific traumatic event like an accident, assault, or natural disaster. Complex PTSD (CPTSD) results from repeated or prolonged trauma, often in childhood or in situations you could not escape like ongoing abuse or neglect. CPTSD involves the same core PTSD symptoms plus difficulties with emotional regulation, self-concept, and relationships. Treatment for CPTSD usually takes longer and adds a stabilization phase before memory processing. If trauma is specifically related to birth, postpartum depression support providers offer specialized support.

Can trauma therapy help with childhood trauma?

Yes. Childhood trauma often manifests differently from adult-onset trauma, affecting attachment patterns, emotional regulation, and self-perception in ways that can feel like personality rather than symptoms. Treatment typically requires longer courses focused on stabilization, relational patterns, and gradually processing early experiences. For children currently experiencing trauma symptoms, child therapists specialists understand the developmental considerations that adult-focused providers may not address.

What are the 3 C's of trauma?

The 3 C's are a framework often taught in trauma recovery: I did not Cause it, I cannot Control it, and I cannot Cure it alone. This concept helps people separate their trauma responses from self-blame. Recognizing that symptoms like hypervigilance, avoidance, or emotional numbing are normal reactions to abnormal events can reduce shame and make it easier to engage with treatment.

Can I do trauma therapy online?

Yes. Research supports virtual delivery for most trauma-focused approaches including cognitive processing therapy and EMDR. online therapy can be especially practical when travel, mobility, or location constraints limit access to trained trauma therapists in your area. Some body-based stabilization work may benefit from in-person sessions, but many people complete full trauma treatment virtually. Discuss format options with your provider during intake.

How do I know if my therapist is properly trained in trauma?

Ask about their specific trauma training, not just whether they list trauma as a specialty. Look for completion of formal training in a named method like cognitive processing therapy, prolonged exposure, or EMDR. Ask how they handle pacing, stabilization, and what happens if you become overwhelmed during a session. A trained trauma therapist will have clear answers to all three. somatic therapy specialists bring additional body-based training that can complement cognitive trauma approaches.