EMDR Therapy in Oregon

640 providers found

Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing — an evidence-based trauma treatment used by Oregon therapists to resolve PTSD and complex trauma.

Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) is an evidence-based psychotherapy developed in the late 1980s by Francine Shapiro and now recognized by the WHO, APA, and VA as a first-line treatment for PTSD. As of April 2026, 640 Oregon therapists on this directory are EMDR-trained. 50 offer telehealth EMDR (using on-screen bilateral stimulation tools), 29 accept Oregon Health Plan, 25 offer sliding-scale fees, and 66 are currently accepting new clients. EMDR uses bilateral stimulation — eye movements, alternating taps, or alternating tones — while you briefly hold a traumatic memory in mind. The mechanism appears to mimic REM-sleep memory consolidation, allowing the brain to reprocess stuck memories so they integrate as past events rather than ongoing threats. EMDR is most-evidenced for PTSD but is also widely used for anxiety, panic disorder, phobias, complicated grief, and chronic pain.

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Nico Aguilar Shank

MSW, CSWA · Portland, OR

EMDR TherapyAccepts OHP

Community listing from public Oregon licensing records — not authored or endorsed by the provider. Personal bio appears once the profile is claimed.

LGBTQ+Cognitive Behavioral (CBT)EMDRTelehealthOHP
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Pam Wood

LPC · Portland, OR

EMDR TherapyAccepts OHP

Community listing from public Oregon licensing records — not authored or endorsed by the provider. Personal bio appears once the profile is claimed.

AnxietyGriefLGBTQ+EMDRNarrativeTelehealthOHP
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Paul Radel

LCSW · Eugene, OR

EMDR TherapyAccepts OHP

Community listing from public Oregon licensing records — not authored or endorsed by the provider. Personal bio appears once the profile is claimed.

AddictionAnxietyEMDRInternal Family Systems (IFS)TelehealthOHP
PB
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Paula Dulcé Bloom

MA, LPC, NCC · Eugene, OR

EMDR TherapyAccepts OHP

Community listing from public Oregon licensing records — not authored or endorsed by the provider. Personal bio appears once the profile is claimed.

AddictionGriefTrauma and PTSDCognitive Behavioral (CBT)EMDRTelehealthOHP
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Rebecca Fuller and Associates

MA, LPC · Eugene, OR

EMDR TherapyAccepts OHP

Community listing from public Oregon licensing records — not authored or endorsed by the provider. Personal bio appears once the profile is claimed.

AddictionGriefSelf EsteemCognitive Behavioral (CBT)EMDRTelehealthOHP
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Rebecca Moore

LCSW · Eugene, OR

EMDR TherapyAccepts OHP

Community listing from public Oregon licensing records — not authored or endorsed by the provider. Personal bio appears once the profile is claimed.

AddictionCognitive Behavioral (CBT)EMDRTelehealthOHP
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Rebecca Spuller

LCSW, CADC · Eugene, OR

EMDR TherapyAccepts OHP

Community listing from public Oregon licensing records — not authored or endorsed by the provider. Personal bio appears once the profile is claimed.

AddictionGriefSelf EsteemCognitive Behavioral (CBT)Couples CounselingTelehealthOHP
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Rob Koning

LPC, NCC, MCoun · Corvallis, OR

EMDR TherapyAccepts OHP

Community listing from public Oregon licensing records — not authored or endorsed by the provider. Personal bio appears once the profile is claimed.

AddictionLGBTQ+Self EsteemCognitive Behavioral (CBT)EMDRTelehealthOHP

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Frequently asked questions

Common questions about this coverage in Oregon.

How does EMDR therapy actually work?
EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) is built around the idea that traumatic memories sometimes get stuck in their original raw form — full of sensory detail, body sensation, and a frozen sense of present-tense danger. EMDR uses bilateral stimulation (eye movements, alternating taps, or alternating tones) while you briefly hold the memory in mind, which appears to mimic REM-sleep memory consolidation and lets the brain integrate the memory as a past event rather than an ongoing threat. The 640 EMDR-trained therapists on this directory have completed at least the EMDRIA-approved Basic Training.
How many EMDR sessions do I need?
For single-incident trauma (one accident, one assault), most clients see significant improvement in 6–12 sessions. Complex or developmental trauma typically takes 6–18 months of weekly work — EMDR is paced through 8 phases, and the early "preparation" phase (resourcing and stabilization) sometimes takes several sessions before memory processing starts. A good EMDR therapist will reassess every 8–12 sessions whether processing is moving forward.
Is EMDR covered by insurance in Oregon?
Yes. EMDR sessions are billed as standard psychotherapy codes (90837 for 60 minutes, 90834 for 45 minutes) — insurance doesn't treat them as a separate service. {{ohp_count}} of our EMDR therapists accept OHP, and most also work with commercial insurance (Kaiser, Moda, Providence, Regence, Cigna, Aetna, BlueCross). Out-of-network clients can usually get 50–80% reimbursed by submitting a superbill.
Can EMDR be done online via telehealth?
Yes, and well — research and clinical experience since 2020 have established that telehealth EMDR is comparable to in-person for most clients. Therapists use on-screen bilateral stimulation tools (a moving dot or alternating beeps through headphones). {{telehealth_count}} of our EMDR specialists offer telehealth, which expands your options significantly if you're not in Portland or Eugene. The exception: clients who dissociate easily or have severe complex trauma sometimes do better in-person, especially in the early phases.
What kind of trauma does EMDR work best for?
EMDR was developed for PTSD and has the strongest evidence there — single-incident traumas like accidents, assaults, medical events, or combat-related PTSD respond well. It's also effective for chronic anxiety with traumatic origins, panic disorder, phobias, and complicated grief. EMDR is now used (less established but growing) for chronic pain, eating disorders, and addiction. It's not typically a first-line treatment for issues that aren't trauma-rooted, like primary OCD or bipolar disorder.
Will I have to talk through every detail of my trauma?
No — that's actually one of the appeals of EMDR. Unlike Prolonged Exposure or CPT (which require detailed verbal recounting), EMDR mostly happens internally. You hold the memory in mind, the therapist guides bilateral stimulation, and you report brief observations every 30–60 seconds. Many clients say it feels less re-traumatizing than talk-only trauma therapies for that reason. The therapist needs to know enough about the memory to track progress, but not a sentence-by-sentence narrative.
How is EMDR different from regular talk therapy?
EMDR is mostly internal. Unlike Prolonged Exposure or CPT (which require detailed verbal recounting of trauma), EMDR has you hold the memory in mind while the therapist guides bilateral stimulation. You report brief observations — what comes up — every 30–60 seconds. The therapist needs to know enough about the memory to track progress, but not a sentence-by-sentence narrative. Many clients say EMDR feels less re-traumatizing than talk-only trauma therapies for that reason.
Is EMDR scientifically valid or pseudoscience?
It's evidence-based and recognized as first-line PTSD treatment by the World Health Organization, the American Psychological Association, the VA, and Department of Defense. There are 30+ randomized controlled trials and several large meta-analyses. The mechanism is still being mapped — early hypotheses about eye movements specifically have been supplemented by broader theories about working-memory taxation and REM-like memory reconsolidation — but the outcome data is robust regardless of which mechanism explanation ends up most accurate.
How many EMDR sessions will I need?
For single-incident trauma (one accident, one assault), most clients see significant improvement in 6–12 sessions. Complex or developmental trauma typically takes 6–18 months of weekly work. EMDR is paced through 8 phases — the early "preparation" phase (resourcing, stabilization) sometimes takes several sessions before active memory reprocessing starts. A good EMDR therapist will reassess every 8–12 sessions whether processing is moving forward.
How many Oregon therapists specialize in EMDR?
As of April 2026, there are 640 Oregon therapists specializing in EMDR, a therapy approach that can be particularly beneficial for individuals dealing with trauma and processing difficult memories.
Do Oregon EMDR therapists accept OHP/Oregon Health Plan?
Yes, as of April 2026, 29 Oregon EMDR therapists accept the Oregon Health Plan (OHP), which is beneficial for individuals with Medicaid coverage seeking EMDR therapy.
Is telehealth available for EMDR in Oregon?
Yes, as of April 2026, 50 Oregon EMDR therapists offer telehealth services, allowing clients across the state, including those in rural areas, to access EMDR therapy remotely.
Do Oregon EMDR therapists offer sliding scale fees?
Yes, 25 Oregon EMDR therapists offer sliding scale fees as of April 2026, which can help make therapy more accessible to clients with varying income levels.
Are Oregon EMDR therapists accepting new clients?
As of April 2026, 66 Oregon EMDR therapists are currently accepting new clients, providing a range of options for those seeking EMDR therapy in Oregon.

As of April 2026, 640 Oregon therapists listed on Oregon Counselor Directory specialize in Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR), an evidence-based approach often used for trauma processing. 50 of these providers offer telehealth sessions, which can be a convenient option for residents across Oregon. 29 therapists accept Oregon Health Plan (OHP), which helps those with Medicaid access EMDR therapy at little or no cost. 25 of these providers offer sliding scale fees to accommodate clients with varying income levels. Currently, 66 providers are accepting new clients. These therapists can assist with various trauma-related issues and may use EMDR in conjunction with other therapeutic modalities.