-
- Washington Square Institute
-
41–51 E. 11th St., 212-477-2600
Unlike therapy programs staffed entirely by recent grads, Washington Square Institute isn’t just a place for budding shrinks to build up a practice; some therapists have been there for 25 years (some of their clients almost as long). Although many other low-cost clinics adhere to a particular practice like Gestalt therapy or psychoanalysis, Washington Square employs over 80 social workers, psychologists, and psychiatrists who deploy a broad range of specialties and styles. An elaborate screening process takes the guesswork out of shrink-shopping: After a three-session workup (total $150), patients are matched to a practitioner by a committee that weighs everything from a client’s personal history and goals to his schedule (9 p.m. appointments aren’t uncommon). The institute isn’t part of any insurance networks; fees are set on a sliding scale from $50 to $100 based on annual income.
Best Cheap Therapy
From the 2007 Best of New York issue of New York Magazine
Competition breeds the best. If only one pizzeria existed in New York, of course, there’d be no real winning slice. Thankfully, we’ll never know what that sorry situation tastes like, since pizza—like dance parties, dog runs, and fried chicken—has to evolve upward here.


Email
Print



The Trouble With Product Integration
Meet the Matisse of Subway-Ad Mash-ups
Equus Is Ready for the Glue Factory
The Coolest Hand: Paul Newman, 1925–2008
Look Book: The Gallery Owner 
Playing Hardball After Signing the Lease
Pork-Focused Street Food Done to a Tuscan Turn
Clam Pies on the Rise
Can Paterson Navigate the Troubled Economy?

Will Sulzberger's Heirs Sell the 'Times'?
How McCain Lost His Public Image
What Wall Street Will Look Like in Fall 2009