EMDR Therapists in Wiener Neustadt

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Online Therapists

Photo of Diana Tutschek - Psychologist, Counsellor in Wiener Neustadt, Lower Austria
Diana Tutschek - Psychologist, Counsellor
MSc
Verified Verified
1010 Vienna
Waitlist for new clients
I am a psychologist and licensed psychological counsellor trained in the UK and Austria. I offer in-person or online individual counselling and couples therapy (marriage counselling). The counselling I aim for is unjudgemental and empathetic assistance to people in overcoming challenges and crises. Depending on the case, the counselling process may be influenced by the approaches I am trained in, including cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), humanistic counselling, EMDR and neuroscience of mental health.
I am a psychologist and licensed psychological counsellor trained in the UK and Austria. I offer in-person or online individual counselling and couples therapy (marriage counselling). The counselling I aim for is unjudgemental and empathetic assistance to people in overcoming challenges and crises. Depending on the case, the counselling process may be influenced by the approaches I am trained in, including cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), humanistic counselling, EMDR and neuroscience of mental health.
0664 38... Reveal Number
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Photo of Joanna Piotrowska, Psychotherapist in Wiener Neustadt, Lower Austria
Joanna Piotrowska
Psychotherapist, Mag.
Verified Verified
1020 Vienna
Psychotherapy offers a confidential, protected framework to work through stressful life events and gain insight into your own personality. The aim of the treatment is to break down impairing thinking, feeling and behavior patterns and to expand existing resources.
Psychotherapy offers a confidential, protected framework to work through stressful life events and gain insight into your own personality. The aim of the treatment is to break down impairing thinking, feeling and behavior patterns and to expand existing resources.
0660 20... Reveal Number
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EMDR Counsellors

Who is EMDR for?

EMDR was initially developed as a treatment for individuals with Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), for whom memories of a deeply distressing experience can be inadvertently triggered by random everyday events. The procedure has since been applied in the treatment of many other conditions. For example, it is used by some therapists to treat anxiety disorders including panic and phobias, depression, dissociative disorders, eating disorders, obsessive-compulsive disorders, and some personality disorders. It is suitable for adolescents and adults.

Why do people need EMDR?

People need EMDR as a way to manage distressing memories that in some way hamper the ability to function in the present. The procedure is believed to target the way memories are stored in the brain. Evidence indicates that past disturbing experiences cause ongoing distress because they were not adequately processed, and when such memories are triggered in the present, they are accompanied by all the emotions, thoughts, and physical sensations as the initial experience.

What problems does EMDR treat?

First and foremost, EMDR is intended as a treatment for PTSD, to defuse distressing memories that intrude on and impair everyday functioning. It is also often used to help those who are subject to panic attacks, phobias, and other forms of anxiety. In addition, EMDR has been used to treat individuals with depression, eating disorders, and personality disorders.

What happens in EMDR therapy?

First the therapist takes an individual’s history, and then the therapist and client decide which distressing experience(s) will be the target(s) of the exercise, delivered via a side-to-side visual stimulus requiring lateral eye movements. The client will be asked to activate thoughts, feelings, and any body sensations related to the troubling experience. The eye movements are said to reduce the emotional charge of the memory, so that the experience can then be safely discussed with the therapist and digested, minimising its ability to trigger anxiety.