Phobias Therapists in Alberta

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Dr. Alissa Priolo

Dr. Alissa Priolo

Registered Psychologist

In-Person

I believe that when young people feel seen and heard, anything is possible! I specialize in working with young people (ages 6-21) and their caregivers to navigate OCD, anxiety, perfectionism, school avoidance, ADHD, autism, giftedness, and gender and sexuality. I tailor my interventions based on CBT, ACT, and ERP's to help my clients use their interests to find their inner strength.

Kristina Founk

Kristina Founk

Registered Clinical Hypnotherapist, Counselling Therapist

Virtual In-Person

Hi! I’m Kristina, and I specialize in guiding individuals through the challenges of anxiety, phobias, and panic attacks. I am an ARCH registered clinical hypnotherapist with specialized training in supporting individuals with PTSD/CPTSD. I would be honoured to help you achieve lasting relief through the transformative power of hypnotherapy. Together, we'll embark on a journey towards inner peac...

Dr. Katrina McDougall

Dr. Katrina McDougall

Registered Clinical Psychologist

Virtual In-Person

I am a clinical psychologist specializing in providing evidence-based therapy services to children and adolescents. In my practice, I value compassionate, collaborative, and empowering approaches to psychological services for youth and their families. I have received extensive training in providing evidence-based therapy and assessment services across the lifespan and in a varie...

Alexandra Goodall

Alexandra Goodall

MA, Registered Clinical Counsellor, Somatic Psychotherapist, EMDR

Virtual

Somatic. Relational. Neurobiological. I am an integrative, somatically-oriented therapist. I support clients who find themselves facing change and growth, be that in relationships, contribution/vocation, trauma recovery, intergenerational legacy, sexuality or spirituality. More at www.alexandragoodalltherapy.com and www.redkitehealing.com

How do therapists in Alberta compare?

Number of therapists listed

4

Average years in practice

7.1 Years

Currently accepting new clients

100 %

Therapists in Alberta who prioritize treating:

100% Anxiety
100% Phobias
50% Emotional Dysregulation
50% Stress
50% Trauma and PTSD
50% ADHD
50% Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)
25% Sleep or Insomnia

How therapists see their clients

50% In Person & Online
25% Online Only
25% In Person Only

Top therapy approaches used in Alberta:

25% Attachment-based
25% Brainspotting
25% Coaching
25% Compassion Focused
25% Deep Brain Reorienting (DBR)
25% Energy Psychology
25% Expressive Arts
25% Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR)

Frequently Asked Questions About Phobias

What is a specific phobia?

A specific phobia is an intense, irrational fear of a particular object, situation, or activity that is out of proportion to any real danger it poses. Common specific phobias include fear of animals (spiders, dogs, snakes), heights, flying, blood or needles, enclosed spaces, vomiting, and the natural environment (storms, water). A phobia becomes a clinical concern when it causes significant distress or limits your life — when you organize your activities around avoiding the feared thing, or when anticipated exposure causes intense anxiety or panic.

How does therapy treat phobias?

Exposure therapy — specifically graduated exposure — is the gold-standard treatment for specific phobias and is among the most effective interventions in all of psychotherapy. The therapist helps you construct a hierarchy of feared situations, from mildly anxiety-provoking to most feared, and guides you through gradual exposure to each level until anxiety decreases. This process teaches the nervous system that the feared object is not actually dangerous. Over time, the fear response extinguishes. Exposure therapy for phobias is not about willpower — it is a structured neurological relearning process.

How quickly do phobias respond to treatment?

Specific phobias are among the most rapidly treatable mental health conditions. Many people with circumscribed specific phobias (as opposed to more complex anxiety disorders) experience substantial relief in just 1–5 sessions of intensive exposure therapy. Even standard weekly therapy typically produces clinically significant improvement within 6–12 sessions. This is in contrast to many other mental health conditions where treatment unfolds over months or years — phobia treatment is an area where focused, evidence-based work can produce dramatic, lasting change quickly.

Can phobia therapy help with blood and needle phobia specifically?

Yes — blood-injection-injury (BII) phobia is common and very treatable, though it requires a slightly modified approach. Unlike most phobias where the physical response is escalating anxiety, BII phobia often causes a vasovagal response (a sudden drop in blood pressure and heart rate that can lead to fainting). Treatment includes a technique called applied tension — deliberately tensing the muscles to raise blood pressure — combined with graduated exposure. This modification makes treatment highly effective and prevents fainting during exposures.

Is medication helpful for phobias?

Medication is not typically recommended as a primary treatment for specific phobias. Benzodiazepines can reduce anxiety in the moment but can also interfere with the extinction learning that makes exposure therapy effective. Therapy alone produces durable change in ways medication cannot. Some people use medication short-term for unavoidable high-stakes exposures (such as dental work or a required flight) while they are building their tolerance through therapy — this decision is made in consultation with a physician.