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Therapy for Healthcare Professionals in Manhattan, NYC

You Can Care for Patients Without Carrying Them Long After Your Shift Ends

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What you've learned to do to get through the work works, until it doesn't. We work with healthcare professionals who are starting to see that something underneath that way of functioning needs attention.

Why Healthcare Professionals Seek Therapy

The skills that make you good at this work don't always protect you from it

“I know how to manage a crisis. I just can’t seem to manage my own.” That’s a version of what we hear often. I can hold a patient through the worst moments of their life. I can make decisions under pressure without flinching. I can compartmentalize in ways most people can’t. And I still come home and can’t turn it off.

The clinical skills that make a healthcare professional effective, the ability to detach, to perform under pressure, to keep going regardless of what just happened, are the same skills that make it hard to get back in touch with what the work is actually doing to you. What gets set aside in the moment doesn’t disappear. It accumulates.

Something has reached a point where it can’t be ignored. For many people, it’s a quiet crisis of identity, a growing sense that the person you are at work and the person you actually are have started to drift. The coping strategies that carried you through training aren’t carrying you the same way anymore. That’s what brings most people here.

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Female doctor with stethoscope working on laptop in clinical setting, reflecting focus, responsibility, and workload

Healthcare Professionals We Work With

We work with healthcare professionals across a wide range of roles and specialties. If you work in medicine or a clinical field and are carrying more than you’re able to put down, this work is for you.

  • Doctors and physicians across specialties
  • Surgeons
  • Nurses and nurse practitioners
  • Physician assistants
  • Emergency physicians and intensivists
  • Anesthesiologists
  • Medical directors and clinical directors
  • Department chiefs
  • Hospital administrators
  • Practice owners and clinic directors
  • Pharmacists
  • Physical therapists and occupational therapists
  • Speech therapists

How We Work With Healthcare Professionals

Getting underneath what the work has built up

Our approach is psychodynamic at its core. That means we work overtime, and we work with what stays with you after the shift ends, what you carry into your relationships, what doesn’t turn off. The goal isn’t to manage those patterns more efficiently. It’s to understand where they came from and what they’re still protecting.

Healthcare professionals often come in with a sophisticated intellectual understanding of what’s happening to them. They can name the burnout. They know about vicarious trauma. What they haven’t had space to do is actually hold their own experience, slow down with it, and understand it from the inside rather than the outside. That’s what the work is.

What We Offer

Our psychodynamic approach is depth-first. We focus on helping people understand what’s actually driving their experience, not just on managing the surface.

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How Therapy Changes What You Carry Home

Before Therapy

After Therapy

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Therapists for Medical Professionals

Hi, we're Midtown NYC, Therapists

We are a group practice of psychodynamic therapists in Midtown Manhattan. A lot of what healthcare professionals bring in traces back to patterns that were already forming before their careers, now compounded by years of demanding clinical work. The question we work with is not just how to manage what’s accumulated but how to get back in touch with who you actually are underneath the role.

Most of the healthcare professionals who come to us have already tried some version of managing their way through it, whether that’s exercise, sabbaticals, or shorter-term therapy that helped with symptoms but didn’t get underneath them. They’re ready for something that goes further. If you are, too, we’re ready to do that work with you.

Minimalist white therapy couch with soft cushions in clean space, representing comfort, safety, and healing environment
Nurse sitting on table looking concerned and fatigued, highlighting emotional strain and burnout in healthcare settings

What Healthcare Work Does Over Time

For many of the healthcare professionals we work with in Manhattan, the effects of the work don’t announce themselves dramatically. They accumulate quietly and show up in patterns that are easy to rationalize or explain away, until they become harder to ignore.

Burnout among healthcare workers is not simply a matter of working too hard. It develops from sustained exposure to emotional demand, moral distress, and the chronic gap between the care professionals want to give and the constraints of the environments they work in. Emotional exhaustion sets in gradually. The clinical efficiency that was once a point of pride starts to feel more like numbness. Days off stop restoring what they used to restore. What draws many healthcare professionals to therapy at this point is not a dramatic breakdown but the quiet recognition that something fundamental has shifted in how they relate to the work and to themselves.

Compassion fatigue is the particular cost of sustained empathic engagement with people who are suffering. It develops differently from burnout, though the two often appear together. Over time, the capacity to be genuinely moved by patient situations begins to flatten. Healthcare professionals experiencing this often describe guilt about that flattening, a sense that something that used to come naturally no longer does. The capacity for care is not gone. It is depleted, and depletion of that kind requires more than rest to address.

Repeated exposure to patient suffering, witnessing death and medical emergencies, and the cumulative weight of frontline care. These are among the things many healthcare professionals carry without naming them as trauma. Secondary traumatic stress can develop in any clinician who is consistently present with others in their most difficult moments. What makes this particularly hard to address is that healthcare training often frames the capacity to absorb this exposure as professional competence. Seeking help for what it does to you over time can feel like admitting to a failure of that competence. It isn’t.

For more on how we work with trauma specifically, see our page on trauma therapy in Midtown Manhattan.

The pressure of high-stakes decisions, the responsibility for life-and-death calls, the chronic feeling of never quite doing enough. These create conditions that are genuinely psychologically difficult. The irritability that shows up at home after a hard shift. The inability to stop rehearsing a case after it’s over. The numbness that sets in gradually and is only noticed when someone close to you points it out. These are not signs of weakness. They are signs of a system that asks an enormous amount without adequate support for what that costs.

The effects of healthcare work rarely stay at work. The inability to be fully present with a partner or child after a difficult shift. The social withdrawal that gets explained as tiredness. The difficulty relaxing even when the day is over, and there is nowhere to be. These patterns show up consistently in the people who come to us. They are often the first signs that something needs direct attention, and they tend to be the last ones the person themselves notices.

Moral distress arises when a clinician knows what the right course of action is but is constrained from taking it by institutional, systemic, or resource-related factors. It is one of the most underaddressed forms of occupational suffering in medicine. Over time, the accumulation of situations where the gap between what care should look like and what was actually possible becomes too wide to ignore, leaving a particular kind of mark. It erodes the sense of purpose that brought most people into healthcare in the first place. Reconnecting with that purpose, understanding what has been lost and whether it can be recovered, is often central to the work.

The work asks a lot. You're allowed to ask something back.

Developing Coping and Regulation Skills

Coping strategies that actually hold over time are different from quick-fix stress management. The following are among the capacities that tend to develop through sustained psychodynamic work.

Healthcare professionals develop emotional regulation through training, but it operates primarily in one direction: it suppresses and defers rather than actually processing. The capacity to feel what’s actually there without being overwhelmed by it, and to act from that place rather than around it, is something quite different. That’s what this work builds.

The difficulty healthcare professionals have with boundaries often traces to something that predates their career: the belief that their value is contingent on being available, useful, and self-sacrificing. Changing that isn’t primarily a matter of assertiveness training or policy. It requires understanding where that belief came from, which is exactly the kind of work psychodynamic therapy is suited to.

Grounding techniques and stress management strategies are useful tools. They are more useful when they’re developed alongside an understanding of what they’re being used to manage and why. Mindfulness practices, breathing work, and other regulation tools are integrated into our practice where relevant, always in the context of the deeper understanding of what has accumulated and what keeps it going.

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Older female doctor attending online session on laptop, representing support, guidance, and continued professional care

What to Expect in Your First Session

A lot of healthcare professionals come to the first session with a sophisticated understanding of what’s happening to them and some uncertainty about whether a therapist will actually understand the specific pressures of the work. That’s a fair concern. We’ll talk about it directly in the first session.

What the first session typically looks like:

Frequently Asked Questions About Therapy for Healthcare Professionals in NYC

Burnout among healthcare workers develops gradually and often goes unrecognized until it has become significant.

Signs of burnout in healthcare professionals

  • Emotional exhaustion that doesn’t resolve with time off
  • Cynicism or detachment toward patients that is out of character
  • A reduced sense of accomplishment or effectiveness despite continuing to perform
  • Chronic irritability or short-temperedness outside of clinical contexts
  • Difficulty disconnecting from work even when you’re not on shift
  • Physical symptoms, including disrupted sleep, fatigue, and somatic tension without a clear medical cause
  • Loss of the sense of meaning or purpose that originally motivated the career

Why do healthcare professionals experience burnout

Burnout in healthcare develops from the sustained combination of high emotional demand, limited control over working conditions, moral distress, and the chronic gap between the care clinicians want to provide and what the system makes possible. It is not a personal failure. It is a predictable outcome of working conditions that ask an enormous amount without adequate support for what that costs.

Healthcare professionals are often better at identifying these patterns in others than in themselves.

Early warning signs worth taking seriously

  • Persistent changes in mood, energy, or motivation lasting more than two weeks
  • Increasing difficulty concentrating or making decisions outside of clinical performance
  • Social withdrawal from colleagues, partners, or family
  • Changes in sleep or appetite that are new and not explained by schedule
  • A growing sense that things that used to matter no longer do

When should healthcare professionals seek mental health support

The threshold for seeking support doesn’t have to be a crisis. If something has been building and the usual ways of managing it are no longer working, that’s enough of a reason to start. Healthcare professionals often wait longer than necessary because of stigma within the profession and the belief that they should be able to handle it. That belief is worth examining.

The dimensions of mental health most relevant to healthcare professionals under sustained occupational stress tend to cluster around four areas.

The core dimensions of mental health for healthcare workers

  • Emotional well-being: the capacity to experience, process, and express feelings without being overwhelmed
  • Relational health: the ability to maintain meaningful connections and be genuinely present in relationships
  • Physical regulation: sleep, somatic experience, and the body’s capacity to recover from stress
  • Meaning and purpose: the sense that what you are doing matters and connects to something larger than daily performance

Sustained clinical work under pressure affects all four. For more on how therapy addresses these dimensions, see what we treat.

Coping strategies vary in how they work and how sustainable they are over time.

Types of coping strategies for healthcare professionals

  • Problem-focused coping: addressing the stressor directly, where that’s possible
  • Emotion-focused coping: processing the feelings that difficult situations generate rather than bypassing them
  • Relational coping: drawing on relationships and community rather than managing in isolation
  • Meaning-focused coping: reconnecting with purpose, values, and what drew you to the work originally
  • Avoidance-based coping: effective in the short term, costly over time

Healthcare professionals are often highly skilled at problem-focused and avoidance-based coping. What tends to be less developed, and what therapy directly builds, is the capacity for emotion-focused and meaning-focused coping.

This is a question that doesn’t have a single answer, because severity depends heavily on context, access to care, and the specific demands of a person’s life. Healthcare professionals experiencing depression, anxiety, PTSD, or the effects of cumulative trauma exposure are navigating those conditions within a professional context that makes them harder, not easier, to address. The expectation of competence and the stigma within the profession are real obstacles. They are also exactly what makes finding the right therapeutic relationship so important.

Healthcare roles with the highest burnout risk

  • Emergency physicians and intensivists with sustained exposure to acute trauma
  • Nurses and nurse practitioners carry the highest volume of direct patient contact
  • Surgeons and anesthesiologists managing high-stakes decisions under time pressure
  • Medical directors and department chiefs navigating both clinical and administrative demands
  • Healthcare professionals early in their careers, before effective coping patterns are established
  • Clinicians in understaffed or under-resourced environments where moral distress is chronic

How does chronic stress affect mental health over time

Chronic workplace stress, when not adequately processed, reorganizes how the nervous system responds to ordinary situations. What began as a response to genuinely demanding circumstances becomes a baseline state. The body stays activated. Relationships suffer. The capacity for pleasure and rest is diminished. Over time, this can contribute to clinical depression, anxiety disorders, or physical health deterioration. It responds to sustained depth work, but the earlier it is addressed, the less accumulated damage needs to be worked through.

Yes. Therapy can lead to meaningful change for healthcare professionals experiencing burnout, though the most effective work goes beyond symptom management. Understanding why burnout developed, what it’s organized around, and what would need to change for it not to repeat is what makes the difference between managing it and actually working through it.

What happens if burnout keeps getting worse even after taking time off

When time off doesn’t restore function, it usually means the conditions generating the burnout are internal as well as external. Rest addresses depletion. It doesn’t change the patterns that generated the depletion in the first place. That’s where therapy becomes necessary rather than optional.

Can burnout lead to long-term mental health problems

Yes. Untreated burnout can develop into clinical depression, anxiety, PTSD, and contribute to significant deterioration in relationships and physical health. The earlier it is addressed, the less accumulated damage needs to be worked through.

What actually works over time

  • Therapy that addresses what’s underneath the symptoms, not just the symptoms
  • Reducing avoidance and developing more capacity to stay with difficult emotional experience
  • Rebuilding emotional resilience rather than trying to push through on depletion
  • Reconnecting with purpose and meaning in the work where that’s still possible
  • Developing healthier professional boundaries grounded in understanding, not just behavior

What’s the 5 4 3 2 1 method for anxiety

The 5-4-3-2-1 grounding technique is a sensory awareness exercise used to interrupt acute anxiety responses. It involves identifying 5 things you can see, 4 you can touch, 3 you can hear, 2 you can smell, and 1 you can taste. It is a useful in-the-moment tool. It is not a substitute for understanding what the anxiety is organized around and what keeps generating it.

Developing healthy boundaries and regulation at work

  • Building brief but genuine moments of transition between demanding clinical encounters
  • Developing the capacity to notice physiological stress responses as they build, not only after the fact
  • Addressing the belief that needing support is incompatible with being a competent clinician
  • Working in therapy to understand which stressors belong to the job and which belong to internal patterns

Managing stress at work becomes more possible once you understand what you’re actually managing. Strategies developed alongside genuine self-understanding tend to hold in a way that techniques learned in isolation don’t.

How is therapy for healthcare professionals different from regular therapy

The content is different. Healthcare professionals often bring specific occupational experiences, including trauma exposure, moral distress, and the particular dynamics of high-stakes clinical work. Those contexts require a therapist who understands them rather than one who needs to be educated about them as you go.

What if I feel like therapy won’t understand the pressure of working in healthcare

That’s a legitimate concern and one worth raising directly in a first session. Working with healthcare professionals is not incidental to our practice. We understand the culture, the specific pressures, and the reasons why seeking help within it feels complicated. The first session is partly a conversation about whether we can actually be useful to you.

Yes. The anxiety that comes with clinical work, when addressed at the level of what’s actually driving it rather than just the symptoms, tends to respond well to psychodynamic therapy. For more on how we approach anxiety specifically, see what we treat.

Because the demands of the work are real and the professional culture that discourages seeking support is both well-documented and genuinely harmful. The same skills that make a healthcare professional effective in a clinical setting, compartmentalization, stoicism, and the capacity to defer personal needs in service of patient care, become liabilities when they prevent the processing of what the work actually does over time. Mental health support for medical workers matters both for the people doing the work and for the patients they care for.

Session Duration

  • 45-minute individual sessions
  • Weekly, consistent time slot
  • Ongoing, depth-oriented work
  • Occasional adjustments based on clinical needs

Rates and Pricing

  • $150 to $360 per session, depending on the clinician
  • Rates discussed during consultation
  • Out-of-network, private pay model
  • Designed for ongoing, long-term work

Insurance

  • Out-of-network only, no direct insurance billing
  • Superbills provided for reimbursement
  • Many clients use OON benefits
  • Guidance available for checking coverage

Our Office Location

  • 240 Madison Avenue, Suite 10K, New York, NY 10016
  • Murray Hill, Midtown Manhattan, near Bryant Park and the Morgan Library
  • Accessible from Koreatown, Kips Bay, and NoMad
  • Subway access via 33rd St, Grand Central, Herald Square
  • Metro-North access via Grand Central Terminal
  • Bus lines along the Madison Avenue corridor
  • Paid parking available nearby
  • In-person and telehealth sessions available

Yes. Our therapists work with clients throughout New York State via telehealth. For healthcare professionals with demanding and unpredictable schedules, online sessions can offer the flexibility to maintain consistency in their work. The clinical approach is the same as in-person.

See If Therapy Feels Like the Right Fit for You

The First Step Is a Conversation.

A free consultation is how we begin. We’ll talk about what you’ve been carrying, share how we work, and figure out together whether this is the right next step. No pressure. No commitment. Just an honest conversation about whether we can be useful to you.

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