PTSD Therapy in Dubai: Symptoms, Causes and Effective Treatment
What Is PTSD?
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is a condition that can develop after a traumatic or highly stressful experience. When traumatic events are not fully processed, the brain and body may continue to react as though the danger is still present.
Common PTSD symptoms include:
- Flashbacks and intrusive memories
- Nightmares
- Hypervigilance and feeling constantly on edge
- Avoidance of reminders of the trauma
- Emotional distress, guilt, shame, or fear
- Dissociation, numbness, or feeling disconnected
PTSD symptoms can affect relationships, work, daily functioning, and overall wellbeing.
What Are the Best Therapies for PTSD?
Research suggests that trauma-focused therapies are among the most effective treatments for PTSD. International treatment guidelines commonly recommend EMDR Therapy (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) and Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (TF-CBT) as first-line approaches.
Other therapies may be particularly helpful when PTSD is accompanied by attachment wounds, dissociation, emotional dysregulation, or complex trauma symptoms.
Deep Brain Reorienting (DBR) – works with early shock and orienting responses linked to trauma.
- Internal Family Systems (IFS) – helps heal wounded parts of the self and reduce protective survival patterns.
- Sensorimotor Psychotherapy
- Somatic Experiencing
The most effective PTSD treatment is often one that is tailored to the individual, their trauma history, current symptoms, and capacity for emotional processing.
Key Insights About PTSD
- PTSD heightens the brain’s threat detection and response system. The brain may continue to perceive danger even after the threat has passed, leading to hypervigilance, anxiety, avoidance, and emotional reactivity.
- Untreated PTSD can significantly affect quality of life. Symptoms may impact relationships, work, physical health, emotional well-being, and a person’s ability to feel safe and connected.
- PTSD can present in different forms. Some individuals develop the dissociative subtype of PTSD, while others may meet criteria for Complex PTSD (C-PTSD), which includes additional difficulties with emotional regulation, self-worth, and relationships.
- PTSD can sometimes be hidden beneath other diagnoses. Symptoms of anxiety, depression, panic, emotional dysregulation, or even ADHD-like presentations may have unresolved trauma at their core. Careful assessment is important.
- PTSD symptoms do not always appear immediately. Symptoms can emerge months or even years after a traumatic experience, often triggered by a related or seemingly unrelated life event that activates unresolved trauma networks.
- PTSD may develop following a single event or repeated experiences. Trauma can result from one overwhelming event, such as an accident, assault, or medical emergency, or from multiple adverse experiences across childhood or adulthood.
- Several effective therapies are available. Trauma-Focused CBT and EMDR therapy currently have the strongest research evidence for PTSD. Emerging approaches such as Deep Brain Reorienting (DBR), Internal Family Systems (IFS), and somatic therapies are also showing promising results, particularly for complex trauma, attachment wounds, and dissociation.
What Are the Common PTSD Symptoms?
The three categories of PTSD symptoms are intrusive symptoms, avoidance; changes in thoughts and mood; and hyperarousal, with or without dissociation.
Intrusive Symptoms
- Flashbacks or distressing memories
- Nightmares
- Repeated thoughts about the traumatic event
Avoidance
- Avoiding places, people, or situations linked to the trauma
- Trying not to think about or feel emotions connected to the event
Changes in Thoughts and Mood
- Persistent guilt, shame, fear, or hopelessness
- Emotional numbness
- Feeling disconnected from others
- Loss of interest in previously enjoyable activities
Hyperarousal
- Feeling constantly on edge or alert
- Difficulty relaxing or sleeping
- Irritability or emotional reactivity
- Being easily startled
Dissociation
- Feeling detached from yourself or your surroundings
- Feeling numb, unreal, or disconnected
- Experiencing moments of being “not fully present”
PTSD symptoms can emerge immediately after trauma or appear months or even years later. When symptoms persist and affect daily life, trauma-focused therapies such as EMDR, DBR, and other evidence-based approaches may help support recovery.
Do PTSD symptoms affect quality of Life?
PTSD impacts not only mental health but also relationships, work, family life, and overall well-being. Many people report reduced life satisfaction, difficulties in social and occupational functioning, and challenges in maintaining daily stability.
Research Highlight: Dr. Millia Begum co-authored a study in the Journal of Mental Health showing that people with PTSD report significantly lower life satisfaction compared to those without PTSD. The findings highlight the importance of trauma-focused therapies in restoring well-being.
How do PTSD Therapies work?
PTSD involves changes across multiple levels of the brain and nervous system. Different therapies engage different parts of this system.
Trauma is not held in one part of the brain. Effective therapy works across levels—from early survival responses to memory to meaning-making.
CBT works at the level of higher brain regulation (prefrontal cortex), supporting thinking, perspective, and emotional control.
EMDR therapy primarily targets memory processing networks, helping traumatic experiences to be integrated and stored as past events.
DBR therapy works with early orienting and shock responses in the midbrain before conscious emotional processing.
Sensorimotor psychotherapy works with body-based survival responses, including fight, flight, freeze, and dissociation patterns.
Across therapies, there is a shared effect of reducing overactivation of the amygdala and restoring a sense of safety.
How PTSD Therapy Works
PTSD therapy in Dubai follows a phased and structured approach:
1. Stabilisation
Building safety, grounding, and emotional regulation
2. Trauma Processing
Working through unresolved trauma using therapies such as EMDR and DBR
3. Integration
Helping the brain and body return to a sense of safety and balance
How Different Therapies Understand PTSD
Different therapeutic approaches understand PTSD in different ways. Each offers a lens into how trauma is held, experienced, and healed.
Somatic & Neuroscience-Informed Therapies (DBR, Somatic Experiencing)
From a somatic perspective, PTSD is understood as unresolved survival responses held in the body.
At the time of threat, natural processes such as
- Orienting
- Shock response
- Defensive actions (fight, flight, freeze)
may be interrupted or not completed.
As a result, the nervous system can remain in states of
- Hyperactivation (alert, anxious)
- Shutdown (numb, disconnected)
- Or alternate between hyperactivation and shutdown
These unresolved patterns continue to shape how the brain scans for danger, influencing thoughts, emotions, and behavior.
LEARN MORE ABOUT DEEP BRAIN REORIENTING THERAPY HERE.
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT)

CBT understands PTSD as a pattern of unhelpful thoughts and learned associations following trauma.
- The mind links certain cues to danger
- Thoughts such as “I am not safe” become dominant
- Avoidance reinforces fear over time
Treatment focuses on:
- Identifying and reframing thoughts
- Gradual exposure to reduce fear responses
- Building coping strategies
EMDR Therapy (Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing)

EMDR views PTSD as memories that are not fully processed and remain “stuck” in the nervous system.
These memories:
- Retain their original emotional intensity
- Are triggered in the present as if the event is still happening
EMDR helps the brain.
- Reprocess these memories
- Reduce emotional intensity
- Integrate them into a more adaptive narrative
LEARN MORE ABOUT EMDR THERAPY FOR PTSD HERE.
Internal Family Systems (IFS) Therapy

IFS understands PTSD as the result of parts of the self carrying burdens from overwhelming experiences.
- Exiled parts hold pain, fear, or shame
- Protective parts develop to manage or avoid this pain
- These protective patterns can shape behaviour, relationships, and self-perception
Healing involves:
- Building a relationship with these parts
- Releasing burdens
- Restoring balance within the system
LEARN MORE ABOUT INTERNAL FAMILY SYSTEMS THERAPY HERE.
Neurobiological Perspective
From a brain-based perspective, PTSD involves changes in how different systems function:
- The amygdala becomes more sensitive to threat
- The prefrontal cortex (thinking brain) has reduced regulatory control
- The hippocampus (memory processing) may struggle to contextualise experiences
This can lead to:
- Hypervigilance
- Intrusive memories
- Difficulty feeling safe
A Unified Understanding
Although these models differ, they point toward a shared understanding:
- Trauma is not fully processed
- The nervous system remains organised around past threat
- The present is experienced through the lens of the past
Key Insights
- PTSD develops from unresolved trauma
It occurs when overwhelming experiences are not fully processed and continue to affect the mind and body. - Symptoms reflect ongoing threat response
These may include intrusive memories, flashbacks, nightmares, avoidance, and negative beliefs about the self. - PTSD therapy follows a phased approach
Treatment typically progresses through:- Safety and stabilisation
- Trauma reprocessing
- Integration
- Evidence-based therapies are central
Approaches such as EMDR and trauma-focused CBT are widely recommended in international guidelines. - Processing trauma does not always require retelling
Therapies like EMDR and DBR can work without detailed verbal disclosure, which may feel safer for many individuals. - No single therapy fits everyone
Different approaches work at different levels:- EMDR → memory processing
- DBR → early shock and orienting responses
- IFS → internal protective and wounded parts
- Integration-based therapy is often most effective
Combining approaches allows treatment to address both- Nervous system survival responses
- Negative self-beliefs and emotional patterns
PTSD Therapy in Dubai with Dr. Millia Begum
Dr. Millia Begum is a UK-trained Consultant Psychiatrist based in Dubai, specialising in trauma therapy.
She offers:
- EMDR therapy in Dubai
- DBR therapy for complex trauma
- IFS therapy for emotional healing
- Integrated trauma treatment plans
Treatment is tailored to each individual, depending on their symptoms, history, and needs.
Attachment Trauma Therapy
Explore how DBR therapy works with early relational trauma and preverbal attachment wounds.
Questions People Ask About PTSD
These are some of the most common questions people ask when trying to understand PTSD, complex trauma, and trauma therapy in Dubai.
Can PTSD appear years later?
Can grief cause PTSD?
What therapy helps when talk therapy hasn’t worked?
Is PTSD therapy confidential in Dubai?
Do I have PTSD?
What are the best therapies for PTSD?
Will I ever heal from PTSD?
Will therapy help me if I cannot talk about my trauma?
About Dr. Millia
Dr. Millia Begum
is a trained trauma specialist with over 25 years of clinical experience in psychiatry and therapy. She trained in the UK’s NHS system and served the NHS in various senior roles.
She is a former EMDR Europe Approved Consultant, EMDR researcher, and board member of the EMDR Association UK. She is now a member of the EMDR International Association (EMDRIA).
Dr. Millia is a Certified Internal Family Systems (IFS) Therapist, bringing a compassionate, parts-informed approach to her work with clients in Dubai.
Contact Dr. Millia
If you would like to book a consultation or learn more about services, please get in touch:
- Clinic: First Psychiatry Clinic
- Address: 975 Al Wasl Road, Dubai, UAE
- Phone: +971 55 355 7855
- Email: info@milliabegum.ae
- Website: milliabegum.ae