
PTSD doesn’t have to be permanent.
Telehealth psychiatric medication management for veterans, service members, and first responders — built by someone who’s been there.
The science caught up. Most veterans don’t know that yet.
Veteran psychiatry telehealth — built for those who served.
The Mission
Reforge Psychiatry exists to prove that PTSD doesn't have to be permanent — and to serve the veterans, service members, and first responders who've been told otherwise.
Who This is For
Veterans of any era, any branch.
Active duty service members.
Law enforcement, firefighters, and EMS.
Anyone who's carried this long enough and is done being told to manage it.
Currently serving patients in California, New Hampshire, and New York.

The People We Serve
Not everyone wearing the weight shows it. We built this practice for the ones still carrying it — whether it's been two years or twenty.
What We Do - Veteran Psychiatry Telehealth
Integrated psychiatric care — built around your presentation, not a protocol.
Visits combine precise medication management with brief therapeutic work. Not every patient needs medication right away — and not every patient wants it.
Conditions Treated
- PTSD
- Treatment-Resistant Depression (TRD)
- Anxiety Disorders
- Chronic Insomnia & Nightmares
- Adjustment Disorders
- Moral Injury

Built By Someone Who's Been There
- Board-certified Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner (PMHNP-BC, DNP)
- NPI Registry
- 16 years in critical care.
- U.S. Army veteran.
- Personal history with PTSD — diagnosed, treated, recovered.
- CAMS-trained in suicide assessment and intervention.
- IPI Ketamine Medical Provider Training Program
- Licensed in California, New Hampshire, and New York.
I've sat in the waiting room. I've been the one filling out the intake form, wondering if this provider would actually get it. That experience doesn't make me a better clinician by itself — but it means I'll never mistake compliance for recovery, and I'll never confuse silence for stability.
I didn't get into this work from a textbook. I got into it because I spent years watching my own nervous system run a program I didn't write — hypervigilance, nightmares, the slow erosion of everything that used to feel easy.

CAMS stands for the Collaborative Assessment and Management of Suicidality.
In plain English: it's a structured, evidence-based way of talking with someone who's thinking about ending their life — not talking at them, not locking them in a room, not panicking. It was developed by Dr. David Jobes and is used across the VA, the Department of Defense, and civilian crisis centers nationwide. The training teaches providers to sit with the hardest conversation in clinical medicine and actually be useful during it. Veterans and first responders deserve a provider who's trained for that moment — not one who freezes.
If you're looking for a CAMS-trained provider in your area, you can search the CAMS-Care Clinician Locator — it's a nationwide directory of providers trained in this framework, regardless of whether they're connected to this practice.
Psychology Today Verification
Yes, someone else verified me. Psychology Today is the largest provider directory in the country, and they independently confirm that I'm licensed, credentialed, and in active practice before listing me.
You can view my full profile there — and if I'm not the right fit for you, their directory is one of the best ways to find someone who is. The goal is to get you to the right provider, even if that's not me.
- VA Community Care vs. Private Psychiatry: What Veterans Should Know
Here's what veterans need to know before choosing between VA Community Care and private psychiatry. - Moral Injury vs. PTSD: Why the Distinction Matters for Treatment
They overlap, but they're not the same condition — and the distinction changes treatment. - PTSD Medication for Veterans: Why It Fails
You got prescribed Sertraline, maybe Prazosin. Here's why medication alone often isn't enough.
If you've been waiting for a reason to try again — this is it.
No paperwork upfront. No commitment.
A 15-minute conversation to see if this is the right fit.
If it's not, I'll tell you — and point you to something that is.
