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Group Therapy for Executives with Addiction

By Dr. Tracey Bassett

In deciding what to write about this month, I drew from Dr. Glazer’s most recent post in which he said, “I now understand that my most important role as a physician and therapist for alcoholism and addiction is to help provide a safe space, a trusting, mutually respectful relationship where I can help guide a person through their own recovery process.” I could not agree more.

One of the things that I think makes our practice so unique is that when we meet with a client for the first time, we conduct an assessment for what the client really needs. Which therapist will they work best with? Which modality of treatment will they respond the best to? What do they feel like they need? We then take all of these factors into consideration and make a treatment plan that works for them. We try to create a plan in which the individual client is getting what they truly need in an environment in which they can feel respected, connected, and supported.

The Benefits of Group Therapy in Addiction Treatment

In working to identify key aspects in recovery, we started to see a gap in treatment. A majority of clients seeking substance use treatment report something similar—feeling that no one in their close circle quite understands what they are going through. As a result, they often feel alone in the process. As doctors, we try to validate and normalize these common feelings. Sometimes this is enough, but a lot of times it is not.

In addition to individual therapy, some clients work well with 12-step or other peer-led recovery programs as part of their recovery process. For example, 12-step meetings can be a really great place for social support and validation, which subsequently reduces isolation, guilt, and shame. This is one of the reasons that these programs can work to support sustained recovery. However, I have found that a lot of clients want the peer support that meetings provide, but they are turned off by other aspects of the program that they feel are too “all or nothing.”

In starting to research alternative options that provide peer support, I’ve found that there is not a lot. Small cohesive group work in a private practice setting for high functioning clients is missing from the treatment landscape. As doctors, we are able to provide a safe supportive environment in our office, but what about an environment in which peers can support each other through mutual experiences?

So why is this so important? Among other things, groups are helpful as they provide the following benefits:

  • Positive feedback and support
  • Decreasing isolation
  • Sharing useful coping mechanisms
  • Challenging self-judgment and negative self-talk
  • Giving the opportunity to witness the recovery of others
  • Providing support to members should they stumble in recovery

A cohesive group can be a very powerful tool in recovery.

Our Manhattan Addiction Treatment Doctors are Backed by Experience

I, along with my colleague Dr. Gottlich, have had the pleasure of seeing the benefits of cohesive group work first-hand. After a lot of thought and planning, we started our first group at the practice in September 2019. After six months, the group is going strong. We have been witnesses to the type of unconditional support, and subsequent rewards, that a group can provide. Although Dr. Gottlich and I are able to provide the space, it is truly the work of the group members that provide a safe and supportive space to navigate the ups and downs of recovery. I feel lucky to be a part of the process, and I hope that we can continue to build group work as a larger part of the practice, as it is a powerful tool that allows a lot of people know that they are not alone in their recovery.

At Fifth Avenue Psychiatry, award-winning doctors provide unique, individualized treatment of alcoholism and substance abuse in a discreet, private setting.


Substance Abuse Treatment: Group Therapy (2005). Retrieved From: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22514847