What the results show

Meaningful, measurable, and framed with care.

Numbers matter to the people funding care — and they should never feel like pressure to the people receiving it. Here’s what the evidence indicates, stated plainly.

The headline figures

50%
Reduction of trauma symptoms after a single session
44%
Reduction in strength of negative trauma-related beliefs
55%
Reduction of in-session distress

What the numbers mean — and what they don’t.

Statistics describe groups, not individuals. We share them so care teams and the people who fund care can make informed decisions — never to set expectations for any one person’s recovery.

01

Symptom reduction

Trauma symptoms drop by about 50% after a single session. Symptoms of anxiety, depression, and complex grief tend to improve alongside them. These results have been observed in both clinical settings and research studies.

02

Distress reduction

In-session distress falls by roughly 55%, and the strength of negative, trauma-related beliefs drops by about 44%. Traumalis is designed to lessen distress during the session itself, so many people feel relief before it even ends—with the fuller effect continuing to settle over the following week.

03

Durability

The change holds. Research shows lower trauma-related symptoms up to six months after the intervention, and in clinical settings patients have maintained significantly lower levels of distress for years after using Traumalis.

Data gathered from real patient outcomes from the original clinician-led version of Traumalis.

For treatment centers & clinicians

See Traumalis in your program.

A short, calm walkthrough — how it’s delivered, what your team sees, and how it fits the care you already provide.