For Veteran living with depression  

For Army Veteran Shirley Benoit, the battle with depression lasted more than a decade.

Medications didn’t work and the side effects often made things worse. When she began Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) therapy at VA, she finally found relief.

“It was doing something for my depression,” Benoit said. “Now I’m doing the maintenance. It really has helped, even with my back pain.”

Benoit served a combined 17 years with the Army National Guard and on active duty, holding roles in combat medicine, supply, engineering, recruiting and administrative support. She first began TMS treatment at the Chillicothe VA Medical Center in Ohio in 2010, when the therapy was just being introduced as an alternative option for Veterans who had not responded well to medication or counseling.

After just four weeks, Benoit noticed a change. “I could tell something was working,” she recalled.

Now a traveling Veteran who spends time in Ohio and Florida, Benoit also continues her maintenance treatments at the Malcom Randall VA Medical Center in Gainesville. She credits her care team, led by Dr. Milankumar Nathani, psychiatrist at the Malcom Randall VAMC, for making each visit a positive experience.“Dr. Nathani and his staff, their patience, their professionalism, the way they handle me, I know that I’m important,” she said. “They listen. They are compassionate about me and the way I feel.”

How TMS treatment works

TMS is a non-invasive treatment that uses magnetic pulses to stimulate areas of the brain linked to mood regulation. It’s typically recommended for Veterans diagnosed with major depressive disorder or obsessive-compulsive disorder, particularly when medications or traditional therapy haven’t provided sufficient relief.

During treatment, Veterans sit comfortably in a chair while a magnetic coil is placed against the scalp. The device delivers gentle tapping sensations for about 20 to 30 minutes, five days a week, for four to six weeks. Many patients begin noticing improvement after just a few weeks.

Unlike other medical procedures, TMS requires no surgery, anesthesia or needles, and it has few to no side effects. Patients remain awake throughout the session.

For Veterans like Benoit, the benefits go beyond symptom relief, they represent a return to hope.

Veterans interested in learning more about TMS can speak with their VA mental health provider to see if the therapy is right for them.


This article was originally published on the VA North Florida/South Georgia Health care System site and has been edited for style and clarity.  

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4 Comments

  1. Lindsay M January 13, 2026 at 18:41 - Reply

    Yes. TMS is great. What is bullshit is the VA telling you that you don’t qualify because you haven’t tried and failed enough medications to receive TMS. Ask me how I know.

  2. Pierre Jeanty January 10, 2026 at 08:56 - Reply

    This is a powerful reminder that when treatments align with how the brain actually functions, outcomes can change lives. Benoit’s experience highlights what neuromodulation does best—offering relief when medication and traditional approaches fall short, with minimal side effects and preserved agency for the patient. Beyond symptom reduction, TMS restores something just as important: a sense of being heard, supported, and hopeful. Stories like this underscore why precision, compassion, and brain-based therapies matter—especially for veterans who have already carried so much.

  3. Martin Holycross January 10, 2026 at 00:09 - Reply

    I have a thought. I believe TMS may be a way to breakup the feeling of ringing in the ears. Ear ringing, when and what sets it off is unknown and is an annoyance. It can come during silence, doesn’t injure you. I do not know the science of the ear structure in sound. Does the brain/ear combination have psychological episodes or remembrance of ear ringing similar to PTSD? My thought is maybe affected brain/ear have a mind of their own. If an ear specialist or neuropathy agree that TMS could, through repetition, be used to retrain and wave out vibration thoughts via headsets, success may happen. If a sound or noise or thought triggered ringing, a change in thought reaction or action might not give it a chance to take over or perhaps lessen its grasp. I listened to morse code and voice signals and now react to war or emergency movies. In sleep or just sitting in quiet, a ringing episode may come. Or my thinking is not correct. Maybe one would just replace ear ringing with TMS vibrations.

  4. Lee Taylor January 9, 2026 at 17:40 - Reply

    Couldn’t set still for 20 -30 min.with my neck pain and shoulder pain

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