Emetophobia, or fear of vomiting, is one of the most debilitating phobias we treat. People avoid entire categories of food, refuse to eat at restaurants, panic around anyone who mentions feeling sick, and sometimes lose dangerous amounts of weight. Emetophobia treatment involves gradual exposure to vomit-related cues, nausea sensations, and eventually simulated vomiting exercises—all done at a pace that feels manageable.
Fear of driving (amaxophobia) affects about 18% of the population and can range from anxiety on highways to complete inability to get behind the wheel. We help you build a hierarchy that might start with sitting in a parked car, then driving around an empty parking lot, then quiet neighborhood streets, gradually working up to highways and bridges.
Needle phobia treatment (trypanophobia) keeps people from getting vaccines, blood tests, and necessary medical procedures. About two-thirds of children and one-quarter of adults experience this fear. Exposure therapy for phobias involving needles includes looking at images of needles, watching videos of injections, holding a syringe, and eventually practicing with simulated scenarios before the real thing.
Fear of flying therapy is incredibly common—up to 40% of Americans experience some level of it. Treatment combines education about how planes actually work with gradual exposure: looking at planes, watching takeoff videos, visiting an airport, sitting on a plane, and eventually taking short flights.
Whatever your specific phobia, the treatment process is similar: identify what you’re avoiding, build a fear ladder, and systematically face those fears in a safe, controlled environment with a therapist who knows exactly how to guide you through it.