Anxiety Treatment in Norwich, CT

Anxiety treatment in Norwich CT

Eastern Connecticut has a real shortage of psychiatric providers — and Norwich residents know it firsthand. Wait lists stretch for months. Primary care doctors do their best but aren't trained to manage complex anxiety presentations. And driving to Hartford or New Haven for a specialist isn't a realistic option for most people. That's not a small problem, because anxiety doesn't wait. It keeps showing up in your body — tight chest, racing heart, the GI issues that flare right before something stressful — and in your sleep, your relationships, your ability to concentrate at work. Sindhia Shyras, APRN is a board-certified Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner with nine-plus years of experience treating anxiety. She sees Norwich patients via telehealth from anywhere in Connecticut, and in person at 1 Liberty Sq, Ste 301, New Britain.

What Anxiety Actually Feels Like — Beyond the Worry

Most people know the mental side of anxiety: the looping thoughts, the what-ifs, the replaying conversations from three days ago. But the physical side catches people off guard. A racing heart that shows up for no clear reason. Chest tightness that makes you wonder if something's wrong with your heart. Nausea or stomach cramping before routine things — a meeting, a phone call, a trip to a crowded place. Muscle tension that lives in your shoulders or jaw. These aren't imaginary and they're not random — they're your nervous system running in threat mode when there's no actual threat. And over time, that's exhausting in a way that's hard to explain to people who haven't felt it.

Panic Disorder and GAD — Two Very Different Animals

Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) is a slow burn. The worry is constant, it touches everything, and it doesn't quiet down even when circumstances are fine. Panic disorder is more sudden — episodes of intense fear with racing heart, shortness of breath, and a feeling that something catastrophic is happening right now. Both are real, both respond to treatment, and both are more common in communities with economic stressors and limited access to care. Norwich fits that profile. The important thing is that neither requires you to just endure it. Medication — SSRIs like Zoloft or Lexapro for GAD, or a combination approach for panic — can make a significant difference. So can having someone with real psychiatric training evaluate what's actually going on, rather than guessing.

Anxiety That Co-Occurs With Depression or ADHD

Anxiety rarely shows up alone. Depression and anxiety overlap so frequently that it's often hard to tell which came first — you're exhausted and withdrawn, but also wired and unable to rest. ADHD and anxiety share a lot of surface symptoms: racing thoughts, difficulty concentrating, restlessness. Getting an accurate picture requires a proper evaluation, not just checking boxes. Sindhia takes the time in that first appointment to understand the whole thing — what your anxiety looks like, what else might be driving it, and whether there's something underneath that's been missed. That leads to treatment that actually fits, rather than a prescription that half-works and leaves you wondering if this is just how you are.

Psychiatric anxiety care available to Norwich CT residents via telehealth

Telehealth Fills the Gap in Eastern CT

Norwich is more than an hour from most psychiatric providers in Connecticut — and that distance alone keeps a lot of people from getting care. Telehealth changes that. Sindhia sees patients across Connecticut via secure video call, which means a Norwich resident gets the same access to a board-certified psychiatric APRN as someone who lives in West Hartford. No long drive, no waiting room, no disrupting your whole day. You book an appointment, click a link, and connect. She also speaks English, Malayalam, Tamil, and Telugu — so if English isn't your first language, that's not a barrier either. And she accepts Aetna, Cigna, Husky Health, Medicaid, United Healthcare, Anthem, ConnectiCare, and self-pay, so coverage is broad.

Frequently Asked Questions

In most cases, yes. Mental health parity laws require insurers to cover mental health care at the same level as physical health care. Elite Health LLC accepts Aetna, Cigna, Husky Health, Medicaid, United Healthcare, Anthem, and ConnectiCare. Self-pay is also available. If you're not sure whether your specific plan covers psychiatric services, call us at 860-515-8689 — we'll look into it with you before your first appointment so there are no surprises.

GAD is a persistent, generalized worry that's hard to control and touches multiple areas of your life — work, health, relationships, money. It comes with physical symptoms like fatigue, muscle tension, and disrupted sleep. Panic disorder is different: it involves sudden, intense episodes of fear with physical symptoms like a racing heart, shortness of breath, and chest tightness — sometimes with no obvious trigger. Some people have both. They're treated similarly in some ways, but the approach isn't identical, which is why a proper evaluation matters rather than just assuming which one you have.

SSRIs and SNRIs — the most common first-line medications for anxiety — typically take two to four weeks to produce noticeable improvement, with full effect around six to eight weeks. That window can feel long when you're in the middle of it. Sindhia builds follow-up appointments into the plan specifically to check in during that stretch, adjust the dose if needed, and make sure you're not left without support while the medication does its work. The goal isn't just to start something — it's to dial it in until it's actually working for you.

Anxiety treatment for Norwich, CT — telehealth statewide and in-person in New Britain.

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