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Claim this listingTyish Hall Brown , PhD
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About Tyish Hall Brown
Tyish Hall Brown, PhD is a Black trauma-informed therapy practicing in WASHINGTON, DC. Tyish offers in-person visits and is currently accepting new patients.
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Black patients and Trauma-Informed Therapy
Black trauma therapists: EMDR, somatic, and culturally attuned trauma care. Racial trauma is real trauma, and increasingly recognized in clinical frameworks.
A growing body of research, most notably work by Monnica Williams (Practice Innovations, 2018), documents that racial trauma produces PTSD-like symptoms that standard trauma frameworks often miss. Black adults report higher rates of PTSD (9.1 percent vs 6.8 percent lifetime prevalence) yet receive trauma-focused therapy at lower rates. Trauma-specialist therapists use modalities like EMDR, Somatic Experiencing, Internal Family Systems (IFS), and Prolonged Exposure, all validated for PTSD and complex trauma.
What trauma therapists treat
- PTSD from single-incident trauma
- Complex PTSD from chronic or childhood trauma
- Racial trauma and microaggression impact
- Birth trauma
- Medical trauma and trauma from healthcare settings
- Intergenerational and historical trauma
Advocacy prompts
- Are you trained in EMDR, Somatic Experiencing, or IFS?
- How do you work with racial trauma specifically?
- What does stabilization look like before we process?
Frequently asked questions
Is Tyish Hall Brown accepting new patients? ▾
Yes, Tyish Hall Brown is accepting new patients.
Where is Tyish Hall Brown's practice located? ▾
Tyish Hall Brown practices at 530 COLLEGE ST NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20059. Phone: 202-806-7651.
Does Tyish Hall Brown offer telehealth? ▾
Tyish Hall Brown sees patients in person at their listed office.
What does a Trauma-Informed Therapy treat? ▾
Black trauma therapists: EMDR, somatic, and culturally attuned trauma care. Racial trauma is real trauma, and increasingly recognized in clinical frameworks.
Articles about Trauma-Informed Therapy
Depression in Black men: what gets missed, and how to ask for help
Why the Black church is the studied lever for closing the Black-mental-health-treatment gap
Hankerson 2012 reviewed 1,451 studies on church-based health programs for African Americans. Only eight addressed mental disorders. The framework-and-evidence-gap explainer.
78 studies, 13,998 participants: culturally adapted therapy produced a medium effect-size advantage over unadapted versions for racially and ethnically minoritized clients