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OCD Treatment in Salem, New Hampshire

Obsessive-compulsive disorder traps you in a loop you didn’t choose — intrusive thoughts demand rituals, and the rituals only make the thoughts louder. It’s exhausting, isolating, and often misunderstood by the people closest to you. At Trailhead, we specialize in evidence-based OCD treatment, including Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP) — the gold standard therapy — delivered with the compassion, structure, and clinical expertise that lasting change requires.
24-48hr Admission Timeline
4:1 Staff-to-Client Ratio
ERP Trained Clinicians
Dual NH & MA Licensed
Recognize the Signs

Signs & Symptoms of OCD

OCD presents as a cycle of obsessions and compulsions. Understanding the patterns can help determine the right level of clinical care.

Common Obsessions
Persistent, unwanted intrusive thoughts about contamination — fear of germs, dirt, chemicals, or illness that feels impossible to dismiss.
Disturbing thoughts about harm coming to yourself or loved ones — violent or sexual images that appear without warning and feel deeply at odds with who you are.
An overwhelming need for symmetry, order, or exactness — a feeling that things must be “just right” or something terrible will happen.
Excessive doubt and fear of making mistakes — did you lock the door? Did you turn off the stove? Did you say the wrong thing? The uncertainty never resolves.
Common Compulsions
Repetitive checking behaviors — locks, appliances, switches, emails — sometimes dozens of times before feeling “safe enough” to move on.
Excessive washing, cleaning, or sanitizing rituals that consume hours of each day and leave skin raw or damaged.
Mental rituals — counting, praying, repeating phrases, or reviewing memories in a specific way to neutralize the anxiety caused by obsessions.
Avoidance of situations, places, or people that trigger obsessive thoughts — a shrinking world that becomes smaller every month.
Severe Impact
Spending multiple hours per day performing rituals, to the point where work, relationships, and basic self-care become impossible.
Complete avoidance of entire categories of life — unable to leave the house, touch certain objects, or interact with specific people.
Secondary depression, shame, or suicidal thoughts resulting from the exhaustion and isolation of living with untreated OCD.
Family and relationship breakdown as loved ones are drawn into accommodation behaviors — participating in rituals to reduce your distress.

If any of these resonated, our clinical team can help determine the right level of care.

Get a Free Assessment

Breaking the cycle starts with a single call

Same-day admissions available. Most insurance accepted. Completely confidential.

Treatment Programs

Programs for OCD

Multiple levels of care designed to meet you where you are. Step up or down as your progress grows — each chapter builds on the last.

i.

Partial Hospitalization Program

Our most intensive outpatient level. Full-day programming with ERP therapy, clinical assessments, group therapy, individual sessions, and holistic activities. The foundation for breaking the OCD cycle.

Mon–Fri, 9am–3:30pm 20–30 days Lunch included
ii.

Intensive Outpatient Program

A structured step-down from PHP. Continued ERP practice, group therapy, and individual sessions with more flexibility for work, school, or family. Morning, afternoon, or evening tracks.

Mon–Fri, 9am–12:30pm 60–90 days Switch tracks daily
iii.

Evening Professional Track

Designed for working adults who can’t attend daytime programming. The same evidence-based IOP curriculum with ERP integration, delivered in the evening.

Mon–Thu, 6pm–9pm For working professionals
iv.

Outpatient Program

Step-down support for continued progress. Less intensive than IOP but maintains therapeutic continuity with weekly groups, individual ERP sessions, and skill maintenance.

1–3 sessions/week Ongoing as needed
v.

Telehealth Services

Full access to our programming from anywhere. HIPAA-compliant video sessions for groups, individual therapy, and psychiatric consultations. ERP can be conducted effectively via telehealth.

Full or hybrid attendance NH & MA residents
vi.

Exposure & Response Prevention (ERP)

The gold standard for OCD treatment. ERP involves gradual, structured exposure to feared situations while resisting the urge to perform compulsions. Our clinicians are trained in ERP protocols and guide you through a personalized exposure hierarchy at your pace.

Individual & group formats Personalized hierarchy Evidence-based
JCAHO Accredited NH Licensed MA Licensed LegitScript Certified HIPAA Compliant
What They Say

Stories from Recovery

“[Client testimonial about OCD treatment at Trailhead — ERP changed my life. I went from spending 4 hours a day on rituals to feeling genuinely free. The therapists understood OCD in a way no one else had.]”
— [Client Name] • Google Review
“[Client testimonial about the personalized approach — my therapist built an exposure hierarchy specifically for my contamination OCD. It was hard, but they never pushed faster than I could handle. I trust them completely.]”
— [Client Name] • Google Review
“[Family member testimonial — the family program taught us how to stop accommodating the OCD. We didn’t realize that helping with rituals was actually making things worse. Learning that changed everything for our family.]”
— [Family Member] • Google Review
Why Trailhead

11 Reasons to Choose Trailhead for OCD Treatment

1. Live at home, heal during the day. Our outpatient model means you sleep in your own bed, maintain family connections, and practice ERP skills in real-world environments from day one.

→ No residential stay required

2. Flexible scheduling across three tracks. Morning, afternoon, or evening sessions — switch daily based on your work, family, or personal commitments. Our Evening Professional Track (6–9 PM) is built specifically for working adults.

→ Switch tracks daily — no penalty
→ Switch tracks daily — no penalty

3. ERP-trained clinicians. Exposure and Response Prevention is the gold standard for OCD treatment. Our therapists are specifically trained in ERP protocols and build personalized exposure hierarchies for each client.

4. Medication support when appropriate. SSRIs (often at higher doses than used for depression) can significantly reduce OCD symptoms. Our on-site Psychiatric NP evaluates each client within 24 hours and collaborates on medication decisions.

→ Psychiatric NP on-site
→ Psychiatric NP on-site

5. Daily DBT skills groups provide the emotional regulation, distress tolerance, and mindfulness foundation that supports the difficult work of ERP.

6. Weekly individual therapy with a licensed therapist at every program level. One-on-one ERP sessions aren’t a luxury — they’re a standard.

7. Client-driven therapy approach. ERP, CBT, ACT, mindfulness-based interventions — your treatment plan is built around your specific OCD subtype and clinical needs, not a one-size-fits-all curriculum.

→ Your recovery, your approach
→ Your recovery, your approach

8. Rapid admission. Multiple weekly admission opportunities. No months-long waitlists — begin programming within 24 to 48 hours of your first call.

9. A family-style environment where staff know every client by name. Shared lunches build fellowship. This isn’t a factory — it’s a family.

10. Holistic & experiential programming including yoga, meditation, breathwork, equine therapy at Blue Sky Farm, and structured recreational activities that support anxiety management.

11. Dual state licensing in both New Hampshire and Massachusetts ensures broad regional access and insurance acceptance across both states.

Treatment Timeline

Your Path Through OCD Treatment

Weeks 1–2 • Assessment & Foundation
The First Pages
The first step is mapping your OCD. Your initial days at Trailhead focus on comprehensive assessment, identifying your specific obsessions and compulsions, and building the exposure hierarchy that will guide your treatment.
  • Comprehensive biopsychosocial evaluation
  • Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale (Y-BOCS) assessment
  • Psychiatric NP evaluation for medication consideration
  • Personalized ERP exposure hierarchy development
Weeks 3–4 • Active ERP
Facing the Fear
Now the real work begins. Guided ERP sessions, daily skills groups, and individual therapy help you face feared situations without performing compulsions — and discover that the anxiety passes on its own.
  • Structured ERP exposures (individual and group)
  • Daily DBT, CBT, and ACT skills groups
  • Psychoeducation on the OCD cycle and habituation
  • Response prevention coaching and between-session practice
Weeks 5–8 • Integration
Writing New Chapters
You start applying ERP skills to real life. Step down from PHP to IOP. Take on more challenging exposures. Discover that the world you were avoiding is not as dangerous as OCD told you it was.
  • Real-world exposure practice outside the clinic
  • Equine therapy, yoga, and mindfulness activities
  • Family therapy and accommodation reduction planning
  • Relapse prevention and maintenance strategy development
Weeks 9–12+ • Maintenance
The Story Continues
OCD management is an ongoing practice. Outpatient support, continued ERP skills, alumni connection, and aftercare referrals ensure you have the tools and support to maintain your progress.
  • Step-down to OP or ongoing individual ERP therapy
  • Booster ERP sessions as needed
  • Alumni program enrollment
  • External provider referrals for long-term OCD management
Our Space

Tour Trailhead

Group Room

Group Therapy Rooms

Comfortable spaces for open dialogue and therapeutic connection.

Meditation Room

Meditation Room

Quiet sanctuary for mindfulness and breathwork.

Serenity Room

Serenity Room

Private space for decompression and sensory regulation.

Dining Area

Dining Area

Where fellowship happens — shared lunches and community.

Game Room

Recreation Room

Ping pong, foosball, Xbox — recovery can be fun.

Outdoor

Outdoor Space

Fresh air and green space between sessions.

Your Team

The People Behind Your Recovery

[Clinical Director]

LCMHC, CCTP

Oversees all clinical operations at Trailhead. Specialized training in anxiety disorders, OCD, trauma processing, and evidence-based behavioral health treatment.

* Years of clinical experience in behavioral health

[Lead Therapist]

LICSW, Master’s Degree

Over a decade of experience in mental health counseling. Specializes in ERP for OCD, DBT skills groups, and individual therapy for anxiety-related conditions.

* Trained in Exposure and Response Prevention protocols

[Nurse Practitioner]

APRN, Psychiatric NP

Manages psychiatric medication for OCD (SSRIs, SNRIs), psychiatric evaluations, and ongoing medication management. Available within 24 hours of admission.

* On-site for all PHP and IOP clients
The Local Picture

OCD in New Hampshire

Obsessive-compulsive disorder affects approximately 1.2% of U.S. adults in any given year1, which translates to roughly 2.5 million Americans living with this condition. In New Hampshire, that means an estimated 13,000+ adults are affected. Despite its prevalence, the average time from symptom onset to proper diagnosis and treatment is 14 to 17 years2 — nearly two decades of suffering that could have been addressed with the right care.

OCD is consistently ranked among the top 10 most disabling conditions worldwide by the World Health Organization3. Yet access to ERP-trained clinicians remains limited, particularly in northern New England. At Trailhead, we are working to close that gap — providing gold-standard OCD treatment in an outpatient setting that is accessible to communities across southern New Hampshire and northeastern Massachusetts.
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), 2023 prevalence estimates for OCD among U.S. adults.
International OCD Foundation, 2023. Average delay between onset and adequate treatment.
World Health Organization Global Burden of Disease study, 2022 update.
Coverage

Insurance We Accept

We work with most major insurance providers. Verify your coverage in minutes.

Provider Network Status
Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield In-Network
Point 32 Health (Harvard Pilgrim) In-Network
Point 32 Health (Tufts) In-Network
Tricare In-Network
Uprise Health In-Network
WellSense (NH Medicaid) In-Network

Don’t see your provider? We may still be able to help. Call or submit the form below.

Verify Benefits

Check Your Coverage

Submit the form below and our admissions team will verify your benefits within minutes.

Your information is secure and confidential. We will never share your data.

At a Glance

Trailhead by the Numbers

Trailhead Treatment Center maintains an approximate 4:1 staff-to-client ratio, with roughly 16 staff members supporting up to 60–70 clients at any given time. Each counselor carries a caseload of about 12 clients, which means there is space — real space — for the kind of individualized attention that makes treatment work. Admissions can be completed within 24 to 48 hours of an initial call, with multiple admission windows available each week. Our facility in Salem, New Hampshire serves adults ages 18 to 80, offering co-ed programming across every level of care. We are licensed in both New Hampshire and Massachusetts, with JCAHO and CARF accreditations pending.

The hardest part is the first call

Once you make it, we handle everything else. Admissions, insurance, scheduling — all of it.

For Families

How to Help a Loved One with OCD

Dear Family Member,

If you are reading this, you are probably worried about someone you love. That worry is a sign of something good — it means you haven’t given up. And we want you to know: you shouldn’t.

OCD is a neurological condition, not a quirk or a preference for neatness. The person you love is trapped in a cycle of intrusive thoughts and compulsive behaviors that they cannot simply “stop” through willpower. They need professional help — specifically, Exposure and Response Prevention therapy — to break free.

One of the most important things you can do is stop accommodating the OCD. This means not providing reassurance when they ask the same question repeatedly, not participating in their rituals, and not rearranging your life to avoid their triggers. Accommodation feels like helping, but it actually feeds the OCD cycle and makes it stronger over time.

Have the conversation with compassion. “I love you, and I can see how much you’re suffering. I want to support you in getting treatment, not in supporting the OCD.” Offer specific next steps: “I found a program with ERP-trained therapists in Salem — can we call together?”

Take care of yourself, too. Consider therapy or our monthly family education groups on Zoom. Living with someone who has OCD is exhausting, and you deserve support. Trailhead offers individual family therapy sessions and ongoing family support — for all family members ages 18 and up, past and present clients.

With hope,
The Clinical Team at Trailhead Treatment Center
When They Won’t Go

What If They Refuse Treatment?

Resistance to treatment is common with OCD. Many people feel ashamed of their intrusive thoughts or believe treatment will make their anxiety worse. Below, our clinical team answers the questions families ask most.

They say their rituals help them cope. Why would they stop?
From the outside, rituals seem irrational. But for the person with OCD, they provide temporary relief from overwhelming anxiety. The problem is that the relief is always temporary, and each ritual reinforces the cycle. Help them understand that ERP doesn’t take away their coping — it teaches them that the feared outcome doesn’t happen even without the ritual. The anxiety passes on its own.
They’re embarrassed about their intrusive thoughts. How do we bring it up?
Shame is one of the biggest barriers to OCD treatment. Many people with OCD believe their intrusive thoughts say something about who they are as a person. Normalize the condition: OCD is a brain-based disorder, and intrusive thoughts are symptoms — not reflections of character. Choose a calm, private moment. Focus on the suffering you see, not the specific content of their obsessions.
Won’t exposure therapy make their anxiety worse?
This is a common fear, and it’s understandable. ERP does involve facing feared situations, which temporarily increases anxiety. But the process is gradual, guided by trained therapists, and always at the client’s pace. Research consistently shows that ERP reduces OCD symptoms in 60–80% of people who complete treatment. The short-term discomfort leads to long-term freedom.
How do we know when it’s “bad enough” for treatment?
There is no minimum threshold of suffering required to deserve help. If OCD is consuming significant time each day, causing distress, or interfering with work, relationships, or daily functioning, treatment is appropriate. The average person with OCD waits 14–17 years before receiving proper treatment. The best time to seek help is now.
What should we do in the meantime?
Start reducing accommodation gradually. Stop providing reassurance, stop participating in rituals, and stop avoiding triggers on their behalf. This will be uncomfortable for everyone, but it removes the fuel that keeps OCD burning. Educate yourself about OCD through the International OCD Foundation. And when they’re ready — or when there’s a window of willingness — have the information ready. We can admit clients within 24 to 48 hours of a call.

Your family deserves peace

Our family support program is open to all family members ages 18+, past and present clients.

Service Area

OCD Treatment Near You

Trailhead Treatment Center is located in Salem, New Hampshire — minutes from the Massachusetts border and easily accessible from communities across southern New Hampshire and northeastern Massachusetts.

103 Stiles Rd, Suites 1 & 2, Salem, NH 03079
Salem, NH Nashua, NH Manchester, NH Derry, NH Londonderry, NH Windham, NH Pelham, NH Hudson, NH Haverhill, MA Lawrence, MA Methuen, MA Andover, MA Lowell, MA North Andover, MA
Call (857) 312-1697
[Map Placeholder]
Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions About OCD Treatment

How do I know if I have OCD or just anxiety?

OCD is characterized by a specific cycle: intrusive, unwanted thoughts (obsessions) that drive repetitive behaviors or mental acts (compulsions) performed to reduce the anxiety caused by the obsessions. While anxiety is a component, the distinguishing feature is the compulsive response. If you find yourself performing rituals, checking, or mentally reviewing things to “neutralize” distressing thoughts, OCD may be the more accurate diagnosis. Our clinical team can conduct a free assessment to help clarify.

• • •

What is ERP and why is it the gold standard?

ERP (Exposure and Response Prevention) involves gradually exposing you to situations that trigger your obsessions while helping you resist performing compulsions. Over time, your brain learns that the feared outcome doesn’t happen and that anxiety naturally decreases without the ritual. Research shows ERP is effective for 60–80% of people who complete treatment — making it the most effective therapy available for OCD.

• • •

Will I need medication for OCD?

Many people benefit from a combination of ERP and medication. SSRIs (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors) are the first-line medication for OCD, often prescribed at higher doses than used for depression. Our on-site Psychiatric NP can evaluate whether medication would be helpful for you and manage your prescription collaboratively.

• • •

What does a typical day in PHP look like?

PHP clients attend Monday through Friday, 9:00 AM to 3:30 PM. A typical day includes group therapy (CBT, DBT, or ERP-focused), an individual session with your assigned clinician, psychoeducation, holistic activities like breathwork or yoga, and lunch. You go home each evening — this is outpatient treatment, not residential.

• • •

Will my insurance cover OCD treatment?

Most major insurance plans cover mental health treatment. We are in-network with Anthem BCBS, Point 32 Health (Harvard Pilgrim and Tufts), Tricare, Uprise Health, and WellSense (NH Medicaid). Use the verification form above or call our admissions team — we can typically verify benefits within minutes.

• • •

How quickly can I start treatment?

Most clients begin treatment within 24 to 48 hours of their initial call. We have multiple admission windows each week. If your situation is urgent, same-day admission may be available when clinically appropriate.

• • •

Do you treat OCD alongside other conditions?

Yes. Many clients with OCD also experience co-occurring conditions such as depression, generalized anxiety, PTSD, or eating disorders. Our clinical team is trained to treat dual diagnosis conditions with an integrated approach. Your treatment plan is individualized to address everything you’re dealing with.

This page is information. Treatment is action.

When you’re ready to move from reading to recovering, we’re here.

Call (857) 312-1697