Neuroclinic Jerusalem Brings Neurofeedback Therapy Closer to Home
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A Jerusalem clinic widens access to EEG-based brain training for children and adults as the summer of 2026 begins.
Neuroclinic Jerusalem is using June 2026 to reaffirm its focus on a quieter form of mental health care, one that works with the brain's own activity rather than relying on medication alone.
The clinic, based in the Romema area of Jerusalem, provides personalized brain training for children and adults who are living with conditions such as ADHD, anxiety, depression, trauma, and learning disabilities.
As families look ahead to the school break and the slower rhythm of the summer months, the clinic is reminding the community that this period can be a practical time to begin a structured course of care.
At the center of the clinic's work is neurofeedback therapy, a non-invasive approach that helps the brain learn to regulate itself more effectively.
The method uses real-time readings of brain activity to guide the brain toward calmer and more focused patterns.
Sensors placed on the scalp read electrical activity, and nothing is ever inserted into the brain.
For many people who have found traditional routes difficult or incomplete, this gentle and gradual style of training offers a different way forward.
How the Process Works
Care at Neuroclinic Jerusalem begins with an evaluation rather than an assumption.
New clients start with an initial assessment and an intake conducted by a licensed clinical social worker.
This is followed by an EEG brain mapping session, which gives the team a detailed picture of how a person's brain is functioning and where patterns may be contributing to the difficulties they are experiencing.
The results are then reviewed together, so that clients and families understand what the data shows before any training begins.
From there, the clinic builds a personalized protocol.
Training usually takes place twice a week in the office, with monthly packages that include a set number of sessions along with a repeat EEG to track how the brain is responding over time.
This measured, data-led structure is part of what makes the approach credible.
Progress is not left to guesswork.
It is checked against the same kind of brain mapping that shaped the plan in the first place.
The clinic notes that many clients begin to notice changes within the first month, with a typical course of training completed over roughly five months.
Care for a Wide Range of Needs
The clinic works with both children and adults, and the range of concerns it addresses is broad.
Alongside ADHD, anxiety, depression, trauma, and learning disabilities, the team also supports people dealing with autism, processing disorders, OCD, and PTSD.
This breadth reflects a simple idea that runs through the practice.
Many of these conditions share a common thread of brain regulation, and training the brain to settle into healthier patterns can help across more than one area at once.
For parents, the appeal is often the calm and patient nature of the work.
Children are not asked to talk through difficult feelings on demand or to sit through treatments that feel clinical and cold.
Instead, the training is steady and low pressure, built around feedback that the brain responds to naturally.
For adults, the same qualities apply.
People who have spent years managing anxiety, the aftermath of trauma, or the daily friction of attention difficulties often value an approach that does not ask them to white-knuckle their way through change.
Bringing Training Into the Home
One of the developments the clinic continues to highlight in 2026 is the option of neurofeedback at home for those who are unable to attend the clinic in person.
Remote training opens the door to people whose schedules, distance, or circumstances make regular in-office visits hard to sustain.
It also reflects a wider shift across health care toward care that fits around real life rather than forcing real life to bend around appointments.
For many households, the summer months are exactly when this flexibility matters most.
Routines change, travel becomes more common, and the usual structure of the school year falls away.
Being able to continue a course of brain training from home means that momentum built up over weeks of work does not have to stall.
The clinic encourages anyone considering this route to reach out and learn how remote sessions are set up and supported.
Working With a Trained Team
Choosing the right practitioner matters in a field that depends on careful interpretation of brain activity.
A skilled neurofeedback therapist does more than run equipment.
They read the data, design a protocol that fits the individual, and adjust that protocol as the brain responds.
At Neuroclinic Jerusalem, intake involves a licensed clinical social worker, and the ongoing training is shaped by repeated EEG assessment rather than by a fixed template applied to everyone in the same way.
This emphasis on individualized care is central to how the clinic describes itself.
Two people with the same diagnosis can have very different brain patterns, and the training they need can differ just as much.
By grounding every plan in brain mapping and revisiting that mapping through the course of care, the clinic keeps the work tied to evidence about the specific person in front of them.
A Growing Interest in Brain-Based Care
Interest in neurofeedback has grown steadily in recent years as more people look for options that complement or sit alongside conventional treatments.
Families are increasingly aware that mental health and attention difficulties are not one-size-fits-all, and they are seeking approaches that respect that complexity.
The wider conversation around brain health, screen time, stress, and the pressures on young people has made many parents more willing to explore methods that focus on regulation and resilience rather than symptom suppression alone.
Neuroclinic Jerusalem sits within this growing field as a local option for residents of Jerusalem and, through its remote offering, for people further afield.
The clinic does not present brain training as a cure-all.
Instead, it offers a structured, measurable, and patient path that many people find easier to commit to than they expected, particularly when they can see their own brain data and watch it change over time.
Looking Ahead Through the Summer
As June 2026 gets underway, the clinic's message is straightforward.
The summer can be a useful window to begin, whether in person at the Jerusalem clinic or remotely from home.
Starting now means that the early weeks of training, when many clients first notice a difference, can unfold during a calmer stretch of the year, setting a foundation that carries into the autumn and the return to school and work routines.
Families and individuals who want to understand whether neurofeedback might suit their situation are invited to learn more through the Neuroclinic Jerusalem website at https://neuroclinicjrslm.com/.
There they can read about the evaluation process, the conditions the clinic works with, and how both in-office and remote training are arranged.
The team is available to answer questions and to walk prospective clients through what a typical course of care involves.
Neuroclinic Jerusalem continues to focus on what it has always done.
It helps children and adults train their brains toward steadier, more focused patterns, using a process grounded in assessment, personalization, and ongoing measurement.
In a season defined by change and flexibility, the clinic is making the case that calmer, more regulated days can begin with a single evaluation.
About Neuroclinic Jerusalem
Neuroclinic Jerusalem is a clinic based in the Romema area of Jerusalem that provides personalized neurofeedback therapy, an EEG-based form of brain training, for children and adults.
It works with people living with conditions such as ADHD, anxiety, depression, trauma, learning disabilities, autism, OCD and PTSD, beginning each course of care with an intake by a licensed clinical social worker and an EEG brain mapping session.
Training usually takes place twice a week in the office, with a remote at-home option for those who cannot attend in person.
Media Contact
Neuroclinic Jerusalem
Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Phone: +972 53 792 9876
Website: https://neuroclinicjrslm.com/
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- Company: Neuroclinic
- Contact #: 972537929876
- Website
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- Contact person: Josh Maraney
- Website
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