Ansonia is a town that's been through things and kept going. The industrial history, the economic changes, the shift from what this valley used to be to what it is now — Ansonia has a resilience to it. But resilience has a cost, and sometimes that cost shows up as anxiety that's been pushed down for so long it's become background noise. You've been getting through. You've been handling it. But getting through isn't the same as being okay. And at some point the tension in your body, the sleep that won't come, the irritability that's started affecting your relationships — those things deserve attention. Sindhia Shyras, APRN is a board-certified Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner with nine years of experience. She's available to Ansonia residents through telehealth from anywhere in Connecticut, and in-person at our New Britain office at 1 Liberty Sq, Ste 301.
When anxiety isn't treated, it tends to expand. The things you avoid multiply gradually. The places and situations that trigger that spike of dread grow wider. You might notice your world getting smaller bit by bit — fewer commitments, fewer risks, more of your energy going toward managing the anxiety rather than living your life. That's not weakness. That's a pattern the brain falls into when it's trying to protect you and can't calibrate correctly. The good news is that pattern can be interrupted. Medication can lower the physiological alarm level. Supportive therapy can help you understand and actively push back on avoidance. Both together tend to produce the clearest results.
In Ansonia and across the Naugatuck Valley, a lot of people come to Sindhia with what turns out to be both anxiety and depression sitting side by side. They don't feel the dramatic sadness they associate with depression — they feel flat, exhausted, disconnected, and wound up at the same time. Can't relax but also can't feel much joy. Overwhelmed but also numb. This combination is real, it has a name, and it responds well to treatment. But it's important to get the full picture right from the start, because the approach is different from treating either condition alone. That's exactly what Sindhia's first evaluation is designed to do.
Sindhia accepts Medicaid, Husky Health, Aetna, Cigna, United Healthcare, Anthem, ConnectiCare, and self-pay. No referral needed. Telehealth is available through a simple, secure video platform that works on your phone — no special equipment, no complicated setup. If you'd rather come in to New Britain, it's a straightforward drive up Route 8. The first visit is about an hour. After that, follow-up appointments are shorter and fit around your schedule.
Serving Ansonia, CT and all of Connecticut via telehealth.
Call 860-515-8689 or book online below.
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