Health anxiety is one of the more quietly debilitating forms of anxiety, and it's more common than most people realize. It's not hypochondria in the dismissive sense — it's a real pattern where physical sensations get interpreted through a lens of threat. A headache becomes a possible aneurysm. Chest tightness becomes a cardiac event. The scan came back fine, but somehow that doesn't bring lasting relief. Living near the shoreline, with easy access to WebMD and a little too much time to think during the off-season, can amplify this significantly. The good news: health anxiety responds well to treatment. SSRIs like Zoloft or Lexapro reduce the underlying anxiety that powers the cycle, and supportive therapy helps interrupt the pattern of checking and reassurance-seeking. You don't have to keep living in fear of your own body.
A panic attack is a physical experience — racing heart, chest pressure, shortness of breath, dizziness, the absolute certainty that something is seriously wrong. And then it passes. Which should be reassuring, but often isn't, because the next thing anxiety does is make you afraid of having another one. That fear of fear is what turns a single episode into panic disorder. People start avoiding situations where they've panicked before. They stop going to crowded places, driving certain routes, being far from home. The world gets smaller. Sindhia treats panic disorder with a combination of medication — SSRIs are first-line, with short-term options available while the medication takes effect — and therapy that helps you stop organizing your life around avoidance. Treatment works. And the sooner you start, the sooner you get your life back.
Not every anxiety flare-up needs a year-round prescription. But if your symptoms follow a seasonal rhythm — getting worse in fall and winter, improving in spring — that pattern is worth discussing. It may point to an interaction between anxiety and a mood component that shifts with light and season. Sindhia takes a thorough history at the first evaluation, including how your symptoms change over time, to make sure the treatment plan fits the actual shape of what you're experiencing. She accepts Aetna, Cigna, Husky Health, Medicaid, United Healthcare, Anthem, ConnectiCare, and self-pay.
One thing people in Milford consistently mention: getting to a psychiatric appointment is its own source of stress. Parking, traffic on 95, taking time off work, the waiting room itself. Telehealth removes all of that. Your appointment with Sindhia is a secure video call — you can take it from home, from your car, from wherever works. Same quality of care, no commute. And for people dealing with panic disorder or health anxiety specifically, not having to navigate a waiting room isn't just convenient — it can be the difference between showing up and not showing up. Call 860-515-8689 or book online to get started.
Anxiety treatment for Milford, CT — telehealth statewide and in-person in New Britain.
Call 860-515-8689 or book online below.
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