Anxiety therapists in Evansville, Wisconsin WI

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Anxiety or Fears

Serenity Therapy, LLC

Licensed Professional Counselor, LMHC, LPC, LCPC, CCMHC, NCC
Together we will determine a treatment plan to assist with your specific anxieties and/or phobias.  
12 Years Experience
Online in Evansville, Wisconsin
Madison, Wisconsin therapist: Jackie Ma, psychologist
Anxiety or Fears

Jackie Ma

Psychologist, Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology
Having health concerns can lead to anxiety or worsen pre-existing anxiety. Anxiety may also worsen your symptoms, such as pain. You may also be understandably worried about the impact of your health concerns on your functioning, relationships, finances, etc, and find that you are having a difficult time managing these worries. My goal is to support you in managing your anxiety using effective and evidence-based treatments such as Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy.  
1 Years Experience
Online in Evansville, Wisconsin
Los Angeles, California therapist: Jayson L. Mystkowski, psychologist
Anxiety or Fears

Jayson L. Mystkowski

Psychologist, Ph.D., ABPP
While Cognitive-Behavior Therapy (CBT) is highly effective in the treatment of anxiety disorders (e.g., Panic Disorder, Social Phobia, and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder), clinicians do see some “return of fear,” or partial relapse, in some patients due to a variety of factors. Over the past two decades, treatment researchers, with whom Dr. Jayson Mystkowski had the pleasure of working with at UCLA for over 10 years, have studied “return of fear” and discovered some key variables that may optimize the effects of learning during CBT for anxiety disorders (Craske et al., 2008). First, evidence suggests that focusing on tolerating fear versus eliminating fear yields better clinical outcomes in the long term. Namely, teaching clients that fear and anxiety are normal feelings, rather than attempting to “down-regulate” such feelings all the time, is more realistic and seems to engender “hardier” clients. Second, helping clients to generate an expectancy that “scary things will not happen,” is very powerful. To do this, it is important for clinicians to create more complex exposure exercises (i.e., tasks in which a client confronts a stimulus of which they are afraid), using multiple feared stimuli instead of one at a time. Then, the lack of a feared outcome becomes particularly surprising and memorable for a client and fear reduction is more potent. Third, increasing the accessibility and retrievability of non-fear memories learned during treatment are powerful factors in mitigating against a return of fear. Craske and colleagues demonstrated that exposure to variations of a feared stimulus, using a random schedule across multiple contexts or situations, is more effective than exposure to the same stimulus, on a predictable schedule, in an unchanging environment. The former paradigm, it is argued, creates stronger non-fear memories that are easier for a client to access when subsequently confronting feared objects or situations outside of the therapy context, than the later scenario. In sum, clinicians have long been aware that some fear or anxiety returns following very successful CBT treatment. As mentioned above, there are some clear, empirically supported ways to modify the therapy we provide to further help clients generalize the gains made in therapy sessions to the real world.  
20 Years Experience
Online in Evansville, Wisconsin
Saint Paul, Minnesota therapist: Joe Groninga, psychologist
Anxiety or Fears

Joe Groninga

Psychologist, PsyD, LP
I have been treating anxiety symptoms for many years. Therefore, it's an area in which I have particular experience. You and I will examine the component parts of your symptoms such as emotions, behaviors, and thoughts. We’ll then examine how these parts are connected and how they impact each other. I’ll help you create changes to one or more of these parts to achieve your desired symptom relief. Helping people break free from their anxiety is one of the primary reasons I became a psychologist.  
19 Years Experience
Online in Evansville, Wisconsin
Washington, Washington, D.C. therapist: David A. Heilman, psychologist
Anxiety or Fears

David A. Heilman

Psychologist, Psy.D.
As a previous opera singer trained at The Juilliard School in New York, I use insights I learned there to help my clients conquer their fears of performance, sports, testing, and social anxiety.  
6 Years Experience
Online in Evansville, Wisconsin