A Jerusalem clinic urges families to use the July school holidays to begin EEG-based brain training before the new academic year.

 

With the school summer holidays now under way across Jerusalem, Neuroclinic Jerusalem is encouraging families to use the quieter weeks of July to begin neurofeedback before the demands of the new academic year return. The clinic, based in the Romema district on Shamgar Street, offers personalised brain training for children and adults, and the mid-year break gives many households the time and calm that a new therapy routine benefits from.

Neuroclinic Jerusalem works with people living with ADHD, anxiety, depression, autism, OCD, PTSD, learning disabilities and the effects of trauma. Its approach is built on EEG brain mapping, which measures a person's own brainwave activity, followed by real-time feedback sessions that help the brain learn to regulate itself. The method is non-invasive. Nothing is placed into the brain, and there is no medication involved. For parents weighing up options during the holidays, that combination is often what makes them look more closely at neurofeedback therapy as a route worth understanding.

Why the summer window matters

The period between school terms tends to be less pressured, with fewer homework deadlines, exams and early starts. Starting a course of training during these weeks means children can settle into the rhythm of regular sessions without competing against a full timetable. The clinic typically begins with an initial evaluation, then moves to twice-weekly one-hour sessions, so establishing that pattern while schedules are lighter can make the transition into the new school year smoother for families who choose to continue.

Adults are part of this picture too. Many people find the middle of the year a natural moment to take stock, and Neuroclinic Jerusalem sees adults who are managing anxiety, low mood or the lingering effects of difficult experiences. The training is the same in principle: understand the individual brainwave pattern first, then work with feedback over time so the brain can practise new ways of responding.

Training that can reach beyond the clinic

Not everyone can travel to Romema twice a week, and Neuroclinic Jerusalem has built its service around that reality. Remote options mean clients who live further away, or whose routines make regular travel difficult, can still take part. This makes neurofeedback at home a practical choice for families juggling work, other children and the usual pressures of a busy summer, rather than something reserved only for those living close to the clinic.

Each programme is shaped around the person rather than a fixed template. The clinic maps where a course might realistically go, sets out what the sessions involve, and keeps families informed as training progresses. A qualified neurofeedback therapist oversees the process from the first evaluation onward, so parents and adult clients are not left to interpret the technology on their own.

A considered, non-committal path

Neurofeedback has grown steadily as more people look for structured, drug-free ways to support attention, mood and behaviour. It is not a quick fix, and Neuroclinic Jerusalem is straightforward about that. Training usually unfolds over several months, and the clinic does not tie clients into long contracts, which suits families who want to try the summer weeks first and then decide whether to carry on into the autumn.

That measured tone runs through how the clinic describes its work. There is no promise of instant results and no pressure to sign up for a long commitment before understanding what the therapy involves. For households weighing up how best to use the holidays, that clarity is often as important as the science behind the sessions.

Anyone interested can find full details, session information and contact options on the Neuroclinic Jerusalem website at https://neuroclinicjrslm.com/.

About Neuroclinic Jerusalem

Neuroclinic Jerusalem is a neurofeedback clinic based in the Romema district of Jerusalem, offering personalised, EEG-based brain training for children and adults. The clinic works with people living with ADHD, anxiety, depression, autism, OCD, PTSD, learning disabilities and trauma, using non-invasive sessions that begin with brain mapping and continue with real-time feedback. Remote options are available for clients who are unable to attend in person.

Media Contact
Neuroclinic Jerusalem
Email: info@neuroclinicjrslm.com
Phone: +972 53 792 9876
Website: https://neuroclinicjrslm.com/