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Mind Balance Counseling — Post-Accident PTSD and Anxiety Treatment in Denver

Dr. Leach, MDreviewed by Dr. Ken Allan

You're physically healing. But something else isn't right. The accident plays in your mind without permission. Getting behind the wheel feels different, or you're avoiding it entirely. You're short-tempered, exhausted, not sleeping, or withdrawn in ways that weren't there before.

These aren't overreactions. They're specific, diagnosable responses to a traumatic event, and they respond to treatment.

Mind Balance Counseling is CCC's primary psychology referral partner in Denver. When your managing physician identifies psychological symptoms that warrant clinical attention, Mind Balance Counseling provides the evidence-based treatment that addresses what happened to your nervous system, not just your body.

Provider Contact

Website: mindbalancecounseling.com Phone: 720-445-9887

What Mind Balance Counseling Offers

PTSD Treatment

Motor vehicle accidents are one of the leading causes of PTSD. Approximately 30-40% of accident survivors develop clinically significant PTSD symptoms (Blanchard et al. 1994; Mayou & Bryant 2001). The traumatic event becomes encoded in ways that produce ongoing distress: intrusive memories, driving anxiety, hypervigilance, and nightmares long after the physical danger has passed.

Mind Balance Counseling uses evidence-based PTSD treatment protocols including:

  • Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT): A structured protocol that helps you process the traumatic event and reduce the distorted thoughts that maintain PTSD symptoms. CPT directly addresses the "stuck points" that PTSD produces: beliefs about safety, trust, and self-blame.
  • Prolonged Exposure (PE): Gradual, structured approach to processing trauma memories and reducing avoidance. PE is one of the most extensively researched PTSD treatments in existence, with strong evidence across trauma types including motor vehicle accidents.
  • Trauma-Focused CBT: Cognitive behavioral approaches specifically adapted for trauma responses, addressing both the cognitive distortions PTSD produces and the behavioral patterns (avoidance, hypervigilance) that maintain it.

Anxiety and Driving Phobia

Post-accident anxiety may not meet the full criteria for PTSD, but it's equally limiting. Fear of specific roads, highway merges, left turns, or the location of the accident. Progressive avoidance, restructuring your daily life to avoid driving triggers, compounds over time without treatment.

Mind Balance Counseling addresses driving phobia through systematic desensitization and graduated exposure approaches: structured, evidence-based techniques that restore driving confidence through progressive practice, not reassurance or willpower.

Depression Treatment

The cumulative weight of chronic pain, disrupted routines, financial stress from the accident, and the injury itself produces depression in a significant percentage of accident survivors. Depression reduces rehabilitation engagement, impairs sleep, and amplifies pain perception, making it both a consequence of the accident and an obstacle to physical recovery.

Treatment addresses mood stabilization, behavioral activation, and re-engagement with normal life activities alongside the physical recovery process.

Behavioral Assessment

Formal assessment of psychological symptoms and their functional impact: the clinical documentation of psychological injury that establishes the diagnosis, severity, and treatment course as part of your medical record.

Location

Mind Balance Counseling 1700 Lincoln St., Suite 2400, Denver, CO 80203 (Accessible from CCC's Aurora and Lakewood clinic areas)

When CCC Refers to Mind Balance Counseling

Your managing physician screens for psychological symptoms at every visit using the Visit Symptom Questionnaire. Referral to Mind Balance Counseling occurs when:

  • PTSD or anxiety symptoms are affecting daily function: Driving avoidance, intrusive memories, panic attacks, hypervigilance, or sleep disruption that limits work, rehabilitation participation, or normal activities.
  • Depression is slowing recovery: Persistent low mood, reduced motivation, withdrawal from activities, or difficulty engaging with physical therapy appointments and home exercises.
  • Emotional symptoms need clinical documentation: Psychological evaluation produces a clinical record of psychological injury (diagnosable conditions, documented timeline, treatment response) that becomes part of your complete medical record.
  • The psychological and physical recovery need to be coordinated: Mind Balance Counseling communicates directly with your managing physician, ensuring that psychological treatment and physical treatment are progressing together, not on parallel tracks that don't communicate.

How Psychological Care Integrates with Physical Recovery

Pain and psychological symptoms interact directly. Chronic pain amplifies anxiety. Anxiety amplifies pain perception. PTSD disrupts sleep, and sleep disruption impairs tissue healing. Depression reduces motivation for physical therapy: missed appointments, fewer home exercises, less full participation.

Treating psychological symptoms improves physical recovery outcomes. The clinical evidence for integrated multidisciplinary care, addressing psychological and physical dimensions simultaneously, consistently shows faster return of function and better long-term outcomes (ASA Task Force 2010; Bandong 2018).

Mind Balance Counseling's communication with your managing physician ensures that psychological progress and physical recovery milestones are coordinated. Your care team knows how you're doing in therapy. Your therapist knows how your physical recovery is progressing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Is PTSD after a car accident real?
Yes. Motor vehicle accidents are one of the leading causes of PTSD. PTSD is a neurological condition. It develops because trauma changes how the brain processes threat signals, creating persistent distress responses that weren't present before the event. It's as real as a disc herniation or a fractured vertebra, and it responds to evidence-based treatment.
How do I know if I need to see a counselor after my accident?
Your managing physician screens for psychological symptoms at every CCC visit. If you're experiencing driving anxiety, sleep disruption, mood changes, flashbacks, irritability, or difficulty returning to your normal routine, mention it to your care team. You don't need to self-diagnose; the screening process identifies what warrants referral.
Is psychology care covered under my accident claim?
Yes. PTSD, anxiety, depression, and other psychological conditions from the accident are documented medical injuries covered under your accident claim. At CCC, psychology referrals are coordinated under the lien arrangement with no upfront cost, the same as physical treatment.
How long does PTSD treatment take?
Evidence-based PTSD treatments like CPT and PE are typically completed in 12-16 structured sessions. Response varies by individual, symptom severity, and treatment engagement. Many patients experience significant symptom reduction within the first several sessions. Your therapist will discuss expected timeline and progress at the initial evaluation.
Can treating anxiety really help my physical recovery?
Yes, directly. Anxiety amplifies pain perception, disrupts sleep, and reduces engagement with physical therapy. Chronic pain patients with treated anxiety report lower pain levels, better sleep quality, and higher physical therapy participation compared to those whose anxiety goes untreated. The psychological and physical recovery aren't separate; they interact continuously.

Ready to start your recovery?

Call (720) 716-4379

A care coordinator will verify your benefits and schedule your first visit. No upfront cost.