Psychosomatic Therapists in New Brunswick

View all cities in New Brunswick

Sarah Elizabeth Smith

Sarah Elizabeth Smith

Licensed Clinical Therapist

Virtual In-Person

I offer psychotherapy and somatic therapy for adolescents and adults in Sackville, NB and virtually through telehealth. I often work with clients with addiction, eating disorders, anxiety, personality and mood disorders, and C-PTSD. I am a psychodynamic therapist which means that we take the time to build trust in the therapeutic relationship and we often explore self and interpersonal patterns.

Nicole Ricketts

Nicole Ricketts

Licensed Counselling Therapist

Virtual

Bilingual (EN/FR) Licensed Counselling Therapist (LCT) offering trauma-informed, nervous-system-aware psychotherapy for adults navigating chronic stress, overwhelm, caregiving, neurodivergence (ADHD/autism), and trauma. A calm, embodied space for regulation, safety, and meaningful change.

How do therapists in New Brunswick compare?

Number of therapists listed

2

Average years in practice

4.8 Years

Currently accepting new clients

100 %

Therapists in New Brunswick who prioritize treating:

50% Caregiver Issues
50% Anxiety
50% Trauma and PTSD
50% ADHD
50% Chronic Pain
50% Grief
50% Self Esteem
50% Self Harming

How therapists see their clients

50% In Person & Online
50% Online Only

Top therapy approaches used in New Brunswick:

100% Internal Family Systems (IFS)
100% Psychosomatic
50% Acceptance and Commitment (ACT)
50% Humanistic
50% Experiential Therapy
50% Relational
50% Somatic
50% Existential

Frequently Asked Questions About Psychosomatic

What does "psychosomatic" mean?

"Psychosomatic" refers to the interaction between psychological and somatic (bodily) processes — the ways in which mental and emotional states affect physical health and vice versa. The word is sometimes misused to dismiss physical symptoms as "all in your head," but this is a serious misrepresentation. Psychosomatic medicine recognizes that psychological factors genuinely affect physical health (influencing immune function, inflammation, pain perception, and organ function) and that physical conditions significantly affect mental health. Mind and body are inseparable.

What are psychosomatic conditions?

Psychosomatic conditions include medically unexplained symptoms (physical symptoms without an identified organic cause), functional somatic syndromes (irritable bowel syndrome, fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome), pain disorders, conversion disorder, somatic symptom disorder, and conditions in which psychological stress significantly influences disease course (cardiovascular disease, autoimmune disorders, chronic pain). These are not imagined or fabricated — the symptoms are real, and effective treatment addresses both psychological and physical dimensions.

What therapy approaches help with psychosomatic conditions?

CBT has strong evidence for irritable bowel syndrome, chronic fatigue syndrome, health anxiety, and somatic symptom disorder. EMDR and other trauma-focused therapies are valuable when trauma underlies somatic symptoms. Somatic experiencing, sensorimotor psychotherapy, and other body-focused approaches work directly with the physical symptoms. Mindfulness-based therapies are helpful for chronic pain. Gut-directed hypnotherapy has strong evidence for IBS. An integrated approach involving both medical care and psychotherapy produces the best outcomes.

How does therapy help with chronic pain?

Therapy for chronic pain does not aim to convince people their pain is not real — it recognizes that chronic pain involves real neurological changes and real suffering. Therapy addresses the psychological factors that amplify pain (catastrophizing, fear-avoidance, depression), helps people develop effective coping strategies, addresses the grief and loss that chronic pain entails, improves quality of life and functioning, and may target underlying trauma or distress that maintains pain. Pain neuroscience education — learning about how pain works — is itself therapeutic.

How do I find a therapist experienced in mind-body conditions?

When searching for a therapist for psychosomatic or mind-body concerns, look for experience with health psychology, chronic pain, somatic symptoms, or psychosomatic medicine. Psychologists working in hospital or rehabilitation settings often have this background. Theralist's directory allows filtering by specialty, including chronic illness and health anxiety. An initial consultation asking about the therapist's experience with medically unexplained symptoms or chronic pain will help assess fit.