
Young Adult PTSD Support at STRiV Forward
With individualized attention, caring mentors, and a welcoming community, we don’t just help students heal and grow. We promote the courage, independence, and skill-building needed to improve overall well-being for every student at STRiV Forward. This includes helping students who are living with the effects of trauma and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which we address with sensitivity and respect.

Why Families and Young Adults Choose STRiV Forward
Safe Space for Growth: We understand how challenging it can be to transition into adulthood. Our program offers a supportive environment where students can learn from failure and try again without the pressure of perfection, fostering resilience and confidence.
Personalized Support: Each student receives tailored mental health care designed to promote community, growth, and accountability. Our small, boutique setting ensures individualized attention with a 1:4 mentor-to-student ratio, enabling meaningful connections and personalized guidance.
Community, Not Just Treatment: Students are integrated into a supportive community rather than feeling like just a participant in a treatment program. We respect their independence through a freedom-first approach that includes no strict curfews and permission to use technology.
Freedom to Pursue Passions: We encourage students to engage in hobbies and activities they love. Our flexible environment promotes self-discovery and confidence, helping students develop independence through meaningful experiences.
Long-Term Relationships: Our dedicated staff has an exceptionally low turnover rate, allowing mentors to build lasting, trust-based relationships with students. This stability supports ongoing growth and personalized mentoring.
Structured Opportunities for Reflection and Growth: Within our safe and supportive environment, students are encouraged to reflect, learn from their experiences, and grow at their own pace. The combination of peer and professional support creates a nurturing space for meaningful development.
Three Simple Steps to Starting Your Recovery
Getting Started is Easy!
Step One
Call Today!
Step Two
Verify Insurance
Step Three
Schedule Admissions
Our Approach to PTSD Treatment for Young Adults

A Therapeutic Transitional Living Program
Part of mental health recovery is overcoming the learned helplessness and hopelessness that PTSD can impose. STRiV seeks to foster autonomy and individuality in our students through community events, therapeutic modalities, and exciting recreational adventures that make the most of what Utah has to offer.
Students seamlessly blend therapeutic modalities with everyday activities and social events for a healing, peaceful experience.
Individualized, Trauma-Informed Care
Evidence-Based Therapies Used to Treat PTSD
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)
Individual Therapy and Talk Therapy
Psychotherapies are used to help students work through their trauma as well as develop healthy coping strategies for recovery. Each therapy session is overseen by a mental health professional who is licensed and certified to provide trauma-informed care.
EMDR and Trauma-Specific Interventions
EMDR is a psychotherapy technique designed to help individuals process and heal from traumatic memories. Therapists guide clients into recalling distressing memories while engaging in specific eye movements or other forms of bilateral stimulation, which encourages emotional healing.
Prolonged exposure therapy is a type of psychotherapy that helps individuals confront and process traumatic memories. It works by using imaginal exposure, in which individuals recount their trauma, and vivo exposure, in which they gradually face reminders of the trauma in real life.
Group Therapy and Community Support
Trauma-Informed Group Therapy


Process Group and Social Skills Development
The Art of Social Connection group operates similarly, but involves members of the local community who have faced similar challenges to our students. Here, students participate in exercises, activities, and conversations that help build social skills.
These groups help students see that they aren’t alone, facilitating healing and the reforging of social connections. Social withdrawal is a serious symptom of PTSD, and these programs directly address and resolve it.
Medication Support and Psychiatry Collaboration
Medication Management for PTSD
The most common of these medications include selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), which block the reabsorption of serotonin in the brain. This improves mood and can alleviate symptoms of depression, which may enhance the experience of positive emotions.
Part of medication management is helping students recognize and mitigate common side effects associated with antidepressants and other medications. Students are monitored carefully while under our care, and medication adjustments will be made as needed.

Integrated Mental Health Care
PTSD and Co-Occurring Mental Health Conditions

Mental Health Conditions We Commonly Support
- Autism spectrum disorder (ASD)
- Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)
- Anxiety disorder
- Depression
- Mild past substance use
- Social struggles
- Gender identity issues
- Process addictions (e.g., compulsive screen/electronics use, which is often a coping mechanism for trauma)
Trauma and Substance Use
Our Program Benefits
Trauma-Informed Without Being Institutional
Structure That Supports Independence


Mentorship and Low Student-to-Staff Ratio
Collaboration With Families and Providers
When to Seek PTSD Support for a Young Adult
Signs It May Be Time to Reach Out
- Being easily startled or frightened
- Seems to be hyperaware of danger
- Self-destructive behavior, such as engaging in uncharacteristic substance abuse, risk-taking, or self-harming
- Trouble sleeping or concentrating
- Irritability, angry outbursts, or aggressive behavior.
- Physical reactions, such as sweating, rapid breathing, a fast heartbeat, or shaking when reminded of the traumatic event
- Experiencing flashbacks and/or panic attacks
- Withdrawing from or avoiding normal interactions
- Expressing thoughts of suicide
Early Support Makes a Difference
PTSD is a treatable condition with professional support. STRiV is here to help young adults not just recover from PTSD, but to find their place in the world as healthy and independent adults.

Frequently Asked Questions About Young Adult PTSD Treatment
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a mental health condition caused by an individual witnessing or being involved in a traumatic event. Traumatic events can be extremely stressful, terrifying, and life-threatening. Anyone at any age, including children and adolescents, can develop PTSD after such events.
Many people who go through or witness traumatic events can experience a period of time in which they have symptoms such as nightmares or anxiety. However, with time and good self-care, they can recover and return to normalcy. When these symptoms persist and worsen to the point that they affect daily functioning, and have yet to go away months or years after the traumatic event has occurred, it’s officially classified as post-traumatic stress disorder.
