Your baby's life was fought for. So were you β and that leaves a mark.
Therapists in San Diego, California
"I should feel grateful my baby is alive. Instead I feel traumatized and no one understands why."




+9 moreNo commitment. We'll confirm your coverage before your first session.
Virtual therapy for San Diego families
Your partner deployed when the baby was six weeks old, your family is back in Ohio, and the postpartum class you signed up for meets across town at 10am, which is the only nap window you have. San Diego looks like the relaxed beach city in the brochure, and the postpartum reality is rarely that. A huge share of San Diego families are military, transplants, or both. North Park, Hillcrest, Pacific Beach, La Jolla, and Chula Vista are full of parents who moved here for a duty station, a job, or grad school and haven't had time to build a close circle. Postpartum depression, postpartum anxiety, and birth trauma thrive in that kind of structural isolation. Phoenix Health therapists hold PMH-C certification and see San Diego clients entirely by secure video. We work with military spouses and birthing parents regularly, including around the specific pressures of deployment, PCS moves, and TRICARE coverage. No traffic on the 5. No babysitter. No waiting room. You don't need a crisis to call. You just need to want things to feel different than they do right now.
San Diego neighborhoods: North Park Β· Hillcrest Β· Pacific Beach Β· La Jolla Β· Chula Vista
You might benefit from therapy ifβ¦
- βYour baby spent time in the NICU or you had a high-risk pregnancy, and the trauma is still with you
- βYou can't talk about it without crying, or you can't talk about it at all
- βYou're hypervigilant about your baby's health long after discharge, in ways that don't feel proportionate
- βYou feel guilty for being traumatized when your baby is home and healthy
- βYou can't imagine being pregnant again, or you're terrified at the idea
- βYou have flashbacks, intrusive memories, or panic around hospitals and medical settings

Dr. Emily Guarnotta
Psychologist & Founder
From our founder
NICU parents often arrive in therapy minimizing what they went through. They'll tell me their baby is fine, as if that means they shouldn't still be carrying anything. I tell them the same thing every time: the outcome doesn't cancel the experience. What you lived through deserves treatment.
What therapy looks like
Our NICU & High-Risk Pregnancy specialists in San Diego, California
Most Phoenix Health therapists hold PMH-C certification β the gold standard in perinatal mental health.

Sailys Concepcion
LMHC, LPC, LPCC, PMH-C
Sailys is a bilingual therapist who helps parents navigate the emotional journey of pregnancy, postpartum, infertility, and loss across California, Florida, Georgia, Arizona, Washington, and Louisiana.
Licensed in CA, LA, WA, AZ, GA, FL

Analisa Velasco-Lopez
LCSW
Analisa is a bilingual Licensed Clinical Social Worker in California who offers a holistic and trauma-informed approach to supporting parents through every stage of their family-building journey.
Licensed in CA

Nadine Mejia
LCSW, PMH-C
Nadine is a licensed clinical social worker who helps parents navigate postpartum depression, grief, and major life transitions in California, South Carolina, and Florida.
Licensed in CA, SC, FL
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Natalia Cruz Navarro
LCSW
Natalia Cruz Navarro is a bilingual therapist who supports parents through pregnancy loss, birth trauma, and postpartum mental health challenges in California.
Licensed in CA
Real clients. Real relief.
What our clients say about their experience.
βββββ
β"My son came home after seven weeks in the NICU with a monitor and a feeding schedule that looked like a hospital chart. I was managing a medically complex baby while recovering from a traumatic birth, alone in our house with no nursing staff. My therapist was the only place I had to fall apart safely."β
β NICU and preemie mom
βββββ
β"I was high risk for most of my pregnancy. Every week felt conditional. When she arrived healthy, I expected relief. What I got instead was a crash: all the fear I'd been white-knuckling through finally had somewhere to go. My therapist helped me process nine months of terror that I hadn't been allowed to show."β
β high-risk pregnancy
βββββ
β"My daughter was in the NICU for nine weeks. I went home every night to an empty room and came back every morning to a baby I was afraid to love because I was terrified she'd be taken from me. My therapist helped me understand that the emotional distance I felt was protection, not failure. Slowly I let her in."β
β NICU mom
βββββ
βMy son was in the NICU for 41 days. I held it together the whole time. Six months after we came home I had a panic attack at a routine pediatrician appointment. EMDR was the thing that finally moved it.β
β Bri, NICU mom
Expert care.
Covered in California.
- βAetna (incl. CVS Health, First Health, & Meritain)
- βBCBS (incl. Anthem, Blue Cross, Blue Shield, & state plans)
- βCigna / Evernorth
- βUnited Healthcare (UHC) / Optum (incl. UBH, UMR, Surest, Oscar, & Oxford)
- βMagellan Healthcare
Most clients pay less than $20 per session.
Accepted Insurance Networks





Ready to start NICU & High-Risk Pregnancy therapy? Hereβs how it works.
The whole process takes about 5 minutes. We handle insurance β you just show up.
- 1
Book your free call
A quick 15-minute chat to hear what you're going through, answer your questions, and make sure we're a great fit for your needs. No cost, no commitment.
- 2
Get matched
We'll pair you with the right specialist for your specific situation. We'll also check your insurance, so you know your exact cost per session before moving forward.
- 3
Start your first session
Meet your therapist from the comfort of home. No commute, no waiting rooms, no judgment. Most clients notice a real difference within just 2 to 3 sessions.
No commitment Β· Most insurance accepted Β· Available this week
Common questions
- Yes. Trauma is about the experience, not the outcome. You can be deeply grateful for the outcome and deeply affected by what it took to get there. Both are true. Therapy makes space for both.
- During the NICU stay, you were in survival mode. Adrenaline, structure, and focus on the baby often delay emotional processing. When you go home, that scaffolding lifts, and the trauma can surface. This is extremely common and very treatable.
- Yes. High-risk pregnancy alone can be traumatic, especially when you spent months waiting for something to go wrong. Many of our clients experienced no NICU stay but came out of pregnancy itself with significant trauma symptoms.
- Yes, this is one of the most rewarding pieces of work. Processing the first experience before another pregnancy can dramatically change how you experience the next one. Many clients come in specifically for this.
- Yes. Phoenix Health provides telehealth therapy to residents of California. Sessions are conducted via secure video from your home, office, or anywhere private β no commute required. All Phoenix Health therapists are licensed and authorized to practice in California.
- PMH-C (Perinatal Mental Health Certification) is awarded by Postpartum Support International (PSI) to clinicians who have completed advanced training in perinatal mental health β covering postpartum depression, anxiety, OCD, birth trauma, and related conditions. It represents the gold standard of specialization in this field.
- If you're struggling β with your mood, your thoughts, your relationship, or just how you're coping β that's enough of a reason to talk to someone. You don't need a diagnosis. A free consultation is a low-commitment first step.
From the Phoenix Health resource center
Articles and guides about nicu & high-risk pregnancy
Trusted by leading voices in parenting and mental health
OBs, doulas, and pediatricians refer their patients to us because we specialize in maternal mental health.
The sooner you start,
the sooner you'll
feel like yourself again.
You've been surviving. It's time to start healing.
No commitment Β· Covered by insurance Β· Available this week
Learning resources
π₯Read our NICU & High-Risk Pregnancy guides βOften goes alongside





