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Is therapy for everyone?

On the latest episode of Glad You Asked, we talk through the barriers to accessing therapy.

Fabiola Cineas
Fabiola Cineas covered race and policy as a reporter for Vox. Before that, she was an editor and writer at Philadelphia magazine, where she covered business, tech, and the local economy.

As the coronavirus pandemic swept across the world in 2020, it brought apprehension, isolation, grief, and uncertainty to millions of people — exacerbating what many experts called a mental health crisis. Though some people turned to therapy as a solution — a third of psychologists surveyed said they were seeing more patients since the start of the pandemic — providers struggled to meet the surge in demand overall. People lamented the waiting lists for therapists and complained of being unable to find a provider, even with the emergence of more online therapy options. While more people saw therapy as a solution, the pandemic helped the country fully recognize the barriers to therapy access that have existed all along.

For this episode of Glad You Asked, I explored whether therapy is for everyone. A 2020 report found that 57 percent of adults suffering from a mental illness received no treatment. Plus, there remains a great disparity in who can access treatment and in who seeks it. In New York City, for example, Black, Latinx, Asian American, and Pacific Islanders are less likely to be connected to mental health care than white New Yorkers. Those without health insurance were less likely to receive mental health care, and the highest-poverty neighborhoods had more than twice as many psychiatric hospitalizations per capita as the lowest-poverty neighborhoods in New York City.

This episode explores some of the biggest questions about therapy: What makes psychotherapy effective? Why do only 55 percent of psychiatrists accept insurance plans? What is causing the therapist shortage? Why aren’t there more therapists of color? Why does therapy carry stigma? How does America’s history of brutalizing the mentally ill affect the field of psychology today? Is psychotherapy the only form of therapy that people should seek? How might alternative forms of therapy help people improve their mental health?

I interviewed countless experts in the field of psychology to answer these questions, and the episode features vignettes from average Americans about their experiences with therapy. I explored a sound bath and equine therapy to go past the mold of psychotherapy. Check out the full episode above to learn more about barriers to accessing therapy and why therapy should be for everyone.

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