Parenting Therapists in Regina, SK

Erika Thebeau

Erika Thebeau

Certified Counsellor

Virtual

Now accepting new clients! I provide telephone counselling support to individuals in an empathetic and compassionate way. I am here to support you as you navigate life and nurture your own ability to work through difficult circumstances. I am here to listen and understand your needs as we work together to get you back to feeling your best throughout your journey.

Shadan Mosavat

Shadan Mosavat

Clinical Counsellor, M.A, CCC.

Virtual

I work with adults struggling with anxiety, depression, and ADHD to help them understand and embrace the parts of themselves that are often hidden beneath these labels. I also support parents in discovering their most authentic and confident parenting style, free from the pressure of societal myths and expectations.

Eleni Anagnosti

Eleni Anagnosti

Pre-Licensed Professional, MS, HBA, BA

Virtual

My approach is compassionate, culturally attuned, and collaborative. I draw from CBT, strengths-based, solution-focused, and trauma-informed approaches to support ADHD, anxiety, depression, burnout, grief, life transitions, and relationship patterns. Together, we focus on building practical tools, emotional balance, and a stronger sense of self-trust.

Julia Finetti

Julia Finetti

Registered Clinical Counsellor & Couples Therapist

Virtual

Julia Finetti (MA, CCC, RCC) is a compassionate therapist specializing in relationships, life transitions, and emotional healing. She creates a warm, grounded space where clients finally feel at ease. With a practical, insight-driven approach, Julia helps people set boundaries, break old patterns, and reconnect with themselves - delivering real, lasting change.

Kristy Brosz, MSW, RCSW

Kristy Brosz, MSW, RCSW

Registered Clinical Social Worker/Mental Health Therapist

Virtual

*Chronic Illness/Rare Disease Therapist & Trauma/Grief Specialist* Kristy's practice focuses on the intersection between trauma and grief/loss. Kristy has a special interest in the areas of trauma, grief/loss, rare/chronic illness, palliative care, and adoption/foster/kinship care.

Dr. Christina Gray

Dr. Christina Gray

Registered Psychologist, PhD.

Virtual

Christina specializes in psychological assessments and counseling for children, adolescents, and young adults for understanding and supporting mental health functioning.She provides individiual counseling for supporting mental health including anxiety, emotion regulation and coping skills, social skills, navigating interpersonal relationships, ADHD support, and parenting support.

Emma Hartley

Emma Hartley

Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying), BA (she, her)

Virtual

Are you looking for a therapist that knows what it's like to feel lost or overwhelmed and how to find your footing again? Noticing yourself feeling more anxious, "just tired", and craving a space to slow down and reconnect with a sense of meaning or purpose? Trying to make sense of shifts in mood, questioning careers, exploring relationships, parenting and identity, or a major life transition?

How do therapists in Regina, SK compare?

Number of therapists listed

7

Average years in practice

9.7 Years

Currently accepting new clients

100 %

Therapists in Regina, SK who prioritize treating:

100% Parenting
57% ADHD
57% Anxiety
43% Trauma and PTSD
43% Emotional Dysregulation
29% Chronic Illness
29% Stress
14% Caregiver Issues

How therapists see their clients

100% Online Only

Top therapy approaches used in Regina, SK:

57% Acceptance and Commitment (ACT)
57% Attachment-based
57% Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT)
57% Trauma Focused
57% Mindfulness-Based (MBCT)
43% Compassion Focused
43% Culturally Sensitive
43% Gottman Method

Frequently Asked Questions About Parenting

What does parenting therapy involve?

Parenting therapy supports parents in developing effective, responsive approaches to raising children. It may involve learning specific parenting strategies, understanding child development and behaviour, improving communication with children of different ages, managing parenting stress, and exploring how your own upbringing shapes your parenting style. Therapy is appropriate for parents of children at any age — from toddlers to teenagers — and is not a sign of failure; it is a sign of commitment to your child's wellbeing.

What parenting challenges does therapy address?

Common reasons parents seek support include managing a child's behavioural issues, ADHD, anxiety, or emotional dysregulation; navigating a child's mental health crisis; supporting children through divorce or family change; co-parenting challenges; parenting a child with developmental differences; managing the exhaustion and loss of identity that can accompany parenthood; and healing reactive parenting patterns that trace back to a parent's own childhood experiences.

What therapy approaches are used for parenting support?

Evidence-based parenting programs include Parent Management Training (PMT), Triple P (Positive Parenting Program), and Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT). Attachment-based approaches focus on strengthening the parent-child bond. Many therapists also work with parents on their own history and patterns using CBT or psychodynamic approaches — because how we were parented profoundly shapes how we parent, often in ways we do not consciously choose.

Should my child be in therapy too, or just me?

This depends on the situation. For younger children especially, parent-focused work is often at least as impactful as child-focused work — children's behaviour and emotional regulation are strongly influenced by the parenting environment. Both parent therapy and child therapy may be recommended simultaneously for more complex situations. A therapist experienced with children and families can assess whether individual child therapy, parent work, family therapy, or a combination is most appropriate.

Can parenting therapy help when I feel I am repeating patterns from my own childhood?

Yes — this is one of the most important things therapy can address. Research shows that unresolved trauma, loss, or attachment wounds from a parent's own childhood are among the strongest predictors of parenting difficulties. Therapy helps you understand the link between your history and your current reactions, process unresolved feelings, and make conscious choices about what to repeat and what to change. This kind of "earned security" in parents strongly predicts secure attachment in their children.