Therapy for Physicians in the NC Triangle Area

Confidential, structured support for physicians navigating burnout, stress, and life outside of medicine. Telehealth statewide across North Carolina.

You went into medicine to make a difference

But somewhere between training and where you are now, the work may have started to take more than it gives back.

I provide therapy for physicians across North Carolina — including Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill, and surrounding communities — through a secure, HIPAA-compliant telehealth platform. My approach is focused, confidential, and grounded in the realities of practicing medicine.

You trained yourself to push through no matter what, but now it's costing you.

The pace started in residency. You told yourself it would ease up once training was over. It didn't — or it did briefly, and then the next demand arrived.

The same drive that got you through medical school is now the thing wearing you down. And because your identity is bound up in being a physician, it can feel disorienting to admit that the work isn't sustaining you the way it once did, or that you're not sure you want to keep doing it the way you've been doing it.

When the demands of medicine start affecting everything else


Physicians come to therapy for reasons that often fall into one of these areas. Many arrive dealing with more than one.

The pace of the work itself

  • Burnout that doesn't resolve with time off

  • Difficulty disconnecting after a shift or call

  • Processing patient deaths, morbidity, or adverse outcomes

  • Anxiety after a complication, complaint, or near-miss

  • Drinking, prescription use, or other coping that's creating consequences

Career, professional, and identity questions

  • Stress around malpractice litigation or risk management review

  • Board complaints, conduct reviews, or licensing concerns

  • Difficulty making career decisions — leaving a position, changing specialties, going part-time

  • Conflict with administration, partners, or department leadership

  • Imposter syndrome that's persisted past training

  • Discrimination, microaggressions, or being the only one in the room

  • Identity questions — what medicine has cost you and what you want next

What’s happening at home

  • Strain in your marriage or partnership

  • Distance from your kids or family despite working for them

  • Irritability or short fuse at home

  • Communication problems that keep repeating

Symptoms you'd take seriously in a patient deserve the same in yourself

Therapy is where you stop waiting for things to change, and get intentional about what you want to do instead.

What you can expect from this work


Therapy with me is structured, not open-ended. We'll identify what's most pressing, work on it directly, and measure progress as we go. Most physicians I work with see results in three areas:

  • Clearer thinking under pressure — so you can make decisions with more confidence, both professionally and personally.

  • Improved emotional regulation — less reactivity, more control, especially in high-stress situations.

  • More workable relationships — at home and at work, with better communication and fewer escalating patterns.

Ready to take the next step?

A 20-minute consultation is the easiest way to find out if this is a good fit.

Couples therapy for physicians in North Carolina


The demands of medicine — long hours, emotional exhaustion, difficulty transitioning out of work mode — create predictable patterns of distance in relationships. Many physicians still perform well professionally while their partnership has eroded at home.

I offer couples therapy using the Gottman Method for physicians and their partners in North Carolina. This work focuses on communication, rebuilding connection, and creating a more stable partnership — without blaming the profession or the person.

therapists for doctors Kenny Levine

Why Physicians Choose to Work with Me

Hi, I’m Kenny Levine, LCSW

The skills that made you a successful physician — compartmentalizing, staying calm under pressure, putting others first — are the same skills that can quietly cost you at home. Most of the physicians I work with don't come in because they're failing at work. They come in because the parts of their life outside work have started to feel like collateral damage.

I come from a family of doctors. I grew up watching the toll that medicine takes, even on the people who love it, and I've spent 25+ years as a therapist working with high-achieving professionals under chronic stress. I've worked with physicians at every stage — from medical students sorting out whether they're in the right specialty, to senior attendings reckoning with what the career has cost them.

My approach is direct and structured. I use DBT-informed methods for stress and emotion regulation, and Gottman Method couples therapy for physicians and their partners. We'll identify what's most pressing, work on it concretely, and check in on whether it's actually helping.

If you've been telling yourself you'll get to this when things slow down — they're not going to slow down. The next step is a short consultation to figure out whether this is a good fit.

A female doctor with dark hair, glasses, and a stethoscope around her neck, smiling while talking on a phone and looking at her laptop in a bright clinic environment.

FAQs about therapy for physicians

  • As a therapist for physicians with over 25 years of experience, I’ve never seen a client experience negative career repercussions from seeking therapy. On the contrary, I’ve seen the opposite—physicians whose careers and personal lives suffored because they didn’t seek support when it was needed. Therapy is confidential, and I’m committed to protecting your privacy. If you’re concerned about how seeking support could potentially impact your licensure or malpractice insurance, please watch this videoon how to mitigate these concerns.

  • I offer therapy via telehealth exclusively for therapy clients in North Carolina at the time of the appointment.

  • My practice is considered out-of-network with most insurance. In some cases you may be able to receive out-of-network reimbursement for services. Please check your insurance plan’s benefits for more information. Most insurance plans do not offer coverage for couples counseling.

  • Individual Psychotherapy Intake • 60 min: $215

    Individual Psychotherapy Session • 50 min: $195

    Couples Assessment (includes Gottman Relationship Checkup) • 80 min: $335

    Individual Partner Assessment Session • 45 min: $170 per session

    Couples Counseling Session • $205

You've been telling yourself you'll get to this when things slow down

They're not going to slow down. The work of building a life that doesn't run you into the ground starts before the schedule clears — not after.