Veronique P Mead
June 23, 2025
Postal Code
80503
Contact Info
1:1 virtual Chronic Illness Consults globally with health professionals, SE students for all levels of credit, and people living with chronic illness. Exploring the role of trauma in specific diseases and physical symptoms.
Using SE, nervous system and polyvagal perspectives to strategize avenues for healing tailored to you as an individual or health professional. Benefits include making sense of symptoms as being driven by intelligent, typically old threat and cell danger responses. Also looking at symptoms as generated by a body doing its best to protect you but now caught in states of fight, flight and freeze. Together we use this trauma informed non-pathologizing framework to orient to symptoms to better work with and heal them. These nuances provide opportunities to increase capacity, decrease symptoms; reduce frequency, slow onset and prevent flare-ups; and to identify roots that drive symptoms so you can more easily address them and find avenues that resonate best with your unique situation.
Pioneering research finds that environmental factors, including trauma, contribute 70% to 90% of risk for chronic illness. These non-genetic risk factors influence genes through mechanisms such as epigenetics, which show reversibility with trauma therapy (Rachel Yehuda, PhD, 2013).
I'm a retired family physician and assistant professor who retrained as a Master’s level somatic trauma psychotherapist and SEP. I have been developing and refining a model on trauma’s role in chronic disease for over 25 years that is founded in the research literature and refined through personal experience and what I've been learning from readers of my blog since 2014.
Using SE, nervous system and polyvagal perspectives to strategize avenues for healing tailored to you as an individual or health professional. Benefits include making sense of symptoms as being driven by intelligent, typically old threat and cell danger responses. Also looking at symptoms as generated by a body doing its best to protect you but now caught in states of fight, flight and freeze. Together we use this trauma informed non-pathologizing framework to orient to symptoms to better work with and heal them. These nuances provide opportunities to increase capacity, decrease symptoms; reduce frequency, slow onset and prevent flare-ups; and to identify roots that drive symptoms so you can more easily address them and find avenues that resonate best with your unique situation.
Pioneering research finds that environmental factors, including trauma, contribute 70% to 90% of risk for chronic illness. These non-genetic risk factors influence genes through mechanisms such as epigenetics, which show reversibility with trauma therapy (Rachel Yehuda, PhD, 2013).
I'm a retired family physician and assistant professor who retrained as a Master’s level somatic trauma psychotherapist and SEP. I have been developing and refining a model on trauma’s role in chronic disease for over 25 years that is founded in the research literature and refined through personal experience and what I've been learning from readers of my blog since 2014.
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