Therapists for Health Anxiety in India

  1. Book a 1-on-1 sessions one of our empaneled Therapists for Health Anxiety in India

  2. Sessions are online and offered at a specialised price as part of our collaboration with each therapist.

Help me find a therapist for health anxiety.  
  • Need help with finding a therapist?

    Tell us a little bit about yourself to receive recommendations on therapists that will suit you better.

    Shortlist for me
1 of 5

How do I know if my health anxiety is serious enough to need therapy?

A lot of people with health anxiety spend months, sometimes years, asking themselves the same question.

You notice a sensation in your body. Maybe it's a headache, a skipped heartbeat, or a strange ache in your stomach. You tell yourself not to worry. Twenty minutes later, you're searching the symptoms online. By evening, you've convinced yourself it could be something serious.

The next day, the symptoms ease. The fear doesn't.

For some people, health anxiety shows up as constant Googling. Others keep checking their bodies for changes like new moles or freckles, or fixating on headaches or unevenness and swellings. Some book repeated medical appointments. Some avoid exercise, travel, or social events because they're worried something bad might happen.

The issue isn't whether the symptom is real. The issue is how much space the worry is taking up.

If thoughts about your health follow you through the day, interrupt your sleep, make it hard to focus at work, or leave you constantly looking for reassurance, therapy is worth considering.

Many people assume they should only seek help when their anxiety becomes severe or completely unmanageable. They come because they are exhausted from thinking about their health all the time.

Can therapy really help with health anxiety or hypochondria? Can therapy help me break the cycle of anxiety, checking, and reassurance?

A lot of people with health anxiety already know their fears sound extreme. The problem is that knowing this doesn't stop the worry.

You might leave a doctor's appointment feeling reassured, then find yourself questioning the results on the drive home. You might promise yourself you'll stop Googling symptoms, only to end up reading medical forums at midnight. You might ask a friend, partner, or family member whether they think something is wrong, feel better for a few minutes, and then start doubting their answer.

Health anxiety often gets stuck in this loop.

Something catches your attention. A headache. A mole. A strange sensation in your chest.

Your mind starts looking for answers. The more you search, check, or seek reassurance, the more important the symptom begins to feel. Instead of settling the fear, those habits keep bringing your attention back to it. Therapy focuses on this cycle.

Sessions often involve looking at what happens between noticing a symptom and feeling anxious. Therapists encourage you to track when you start checking your body, how often you search online, or what makes you seek reassurance from others. These details help reveal patterns that are easy to miss in everyday life.

As therapy progresses, the work shifts toward responding differently when the fear shows up. That might mean resisting the urge to Google, or learning to sit with uncertainty for a little longer than you normally would.

Help me find a Therapist  

What if I’m scared therapy will miss a real illness?

Most people who seek therapy for health anxiety aren't looking for more information about illnesses. They've usually already spent plenty of time searching symptoms, reading articles, or trying to figure out what might be wrong.

The difficulty is often what happens after the worry starts.

A small sensation turns into a long chain of questions. A Google search turns into an hour of reading. A doctor's reassurance feels convincing for a day, then the doubt returns.

Because of this, many therapists use CBT, or Cognitive Behavioural Therapy. A large part of these sessions break the the habits that keep anxiety going. Things like repeated checking, body scanning, searching for symptoms online, or asking others for reassurance.

Sessions often involve looking at these patterns in detail. You might notice how often you check a symptom during the day, what situations trigger worry, or what happens after you seek reassurance.

Some therapists also use approaches that help you handle uncertainty more comfortably. Instead of trying to get rid of every anxious thought, the focus shifts to changing how you respond when those thoughts appear.

What kind of therapy works best for health anxiety?

The first few sessions are about understanding how the anxiety shows up in your day-to-day life.

A therapist starts with asking happens after you notice a symptom. So you could be waking up with a headache. Or feel a flutter in your chest. Keep noticing a new ache somewhere in your body. And you'd be googling to see what it could mean?

The distress comes from everything that follows after being obsessed with the symptoms. The worry grows, you start looking for answers, and for a while you feel reassured. Then a new doubt appears, and the whole process starts again. Unfortunately, the cycle becomes familiar, and you don't notice that you're doing it.

So as you share things with your therapist, certain habits often start to stand out. And from there, you and your therapist explore ways of handling those moments without getting pulled into the same cycle again.

Help me find a Therapist  

What happens in therapy for health anxiety?

The answer usually depends on how much anxiety is affecting your daily life.

Some people worry about their health every day, but they're still able to go to work, spend time with family, sleep reasonably well, and keep up with their usual routine. In these situations, therapy is often the first place to start.

A lot of the work involves looking at what happens when a health fear appears.

The anxiety becomes much harder to live with. Sleep starts getting affected. Work becomes difficult to focus on. Daily activities feel exhausting because so much energy goes into worrying about symptoms or possible illnesses. Some people also experience panic attacks or find themselves avoiding places and situations that trigger health fears.

When anxiety starts affecting daily life in these ways, medication can be a good idea to discuss with a psychiatrist.

Medication doesn't make worries disappear, but it does reduce the intensity of the fear. The thoughts may still be there, but they don't feel as loud or as urgent. That can make it easier to take part in therapy and work on the new habits.

Other common questions

Is medication necessary for health anxiety or is therapy enough?

This fear sits at the centre of health anxiety for many people.

You might understand that anxiety is part of the picture. At the same time, a question keeps coming back. "What if this time it's something serious?"

A therapist won't ask you to ignore symptoms or stop taking care of your health. If you have a new symptom or a genuine medical concern, getting appropriate medical advice still matters.

One fear therapists hear often is, "What if therapy makes me miss something important?" People worry that if they stop checking, stop Googling, or stop seeking reassurance, they won't catch a serious illness in time. Some fear they'll become careless about their health. Others worry that a therapist will dismiss their symptoms or assume everything is anxiety.

What therapy looks at is what happens after you've already received that advice. Many people with health anxiety have had tests, scans, examinations, or consultations that found nothing serious. The relief lasts for a while. Then doubt starts creeping in again. You wonder whether the doctor missed something. You start paying closer attention to your body. You search online for another explanation.

Some people live with real health conditions and still struggle with health anxiety. A person with migraines may constantly worry about a brain tumour. Someone with IBS may fear they have a serious illness that doctors haven't found yet.

Therapy helps you separate a medical problem from the anxiety surrounding it.

What if I’ve had health anxiety for many years—can therapy still help?

One way to tell is by paying attention to what happens when you talk about your fears.

Let's say you're worried about a headache that won't go away. Or you're convinced a symptom means something serious despite several medical appointments. A therapist who understands health anxiety won't laugh it off. They also won't spend the whole session trying to convince you that you're fine.

Instead, they'll want to know what happened after the worry started.

Did you Google it?

Did you keep checking the symptom?

Did you ask several people what they thought?

Did you feel reassured for a few hours and then start worrying again?

These details matter because health anxiety is often less about the symptom itself and more about the cycle that follows.

A good therapist helps you understand that cycle. You should leave sessions feeling like someone understands what you're going through, not like you've been told to "stop worrying."

How do therapists deal with reassurance-seeking behaviour?

Progress isn't usually measured by how often anxious thoughts show up.

Most people still have moments where they worry about their health. The difference is what happens next.

Picture a situation that would have ruined your entire day six months ago. Maybe you notice a strange sensation in your chest. Maybe you wake up with a headache.

Before therapy, you might have spent hours searching for symptoms online, checking your body, or asking people whether they thought something was wrong.

Now you notice the worry, but you don't automatically act on it.

You go to work.

You finish what you're doing.

You think about it less.

The anxiety still appears, but it no longer controls your day.

That's often what progress looks like. Not the complete absence of fear, but having more freedom in how you respond to it.

How do therapists measure progress in health anxiety treatment?

People often say things like, "I've always been like this" or "I've worried about my health for as long as I can remember."

Sometimes the anxiety has been around for ten years. Sometimes twenty.

When something has been part of your life for that long, it's easy to assume it can't change. But many of the habits linked to health anxiety develop gradually.

You learn to check symptoms. You learn to treat every unusual sensation as a possible danger. After repeating those habits for years, they start to feel automatic.

The effects often reach beyond the anxiety itself. Some people find that conversations with family members regularly revolve around symptoms, test results, or health concerns. Others notice they often ask for reassurance, which leaves loved ones frustrated. Some stop exercising, travelling, eating certain foods, or making plans because they worry something might happen while they're away from help or medical care.

So, therapy helps slow the process down and examine what's happening step by step. Many people are surprised by how much of their day is spent checking, researching, monitoring symptoms, or mentally reviewing worst-case scenarios.

Once you start noticing those patterns, you have more choice in how you respond.

How do I know if my therapist understands health anxiety?

Most people don't realise how often they're looking for reassurance.

Sometimes it looks obvious. You ask your partner if a symptom seems serious. You book another doctor's appointment. You search the internet for the tenth time that week.

Sometimes it's much harder to spot.

You keep going back to the old tests. Or you keep checking for symptoms to get better. You compare your experience to stories you've read online.

There are also quieter forms of reassurance-seeking. Looking up life expectancy statistics. Reading success stories to feel calmer. Avoiding activities that might trigger symptoms. Carrying medication, medical devices, or emergency numbers "just in case" and repeatedly checking that they're available.

In the moment, reassurance feels helpful. Your anxiety drops for a while. But it's only for a while, and the problem is that the relief rarely lasts. A new doubt appears. Then comes another.

Therapy often involves paying attention to these moments. Like what made you check your body again? What were you hoping for from it? So, as you start noticing these patterns, you become less dependent on them. A symptom still gets your attention, but it doesn't immediately send you into a spiral of searching, checking, or seeking answers. You learn how to sit with the discomfort and let it pass on its own.