A time of emotional stress or crisis can be a turning point in a person’s life and not a breaking point-----a time of hope and not of despair.
Stress is a natural part of life:
Children, adolescents and adults all have stress in their life;
It can be difficult at times to function at our best trying to meet the ever-increasing demands of contemporary life;
We may develop significant distress in the form of symptoms such as depression, anxiety, school problems, excessive anger or work problems;
Conflict is present in all families; and
Some crises are unavoidable and relate to a person or family’s passage from one stage to another.
The stress of everyday life can be overcome:
Individuals or families in distress often describe their experience as feeling “locked up” and hopeless, with few ways out.
Early evaluation, detection and proper intervention can help a patient or family avoid or lessen such risks.
Neither you nor your family need to go through stress all alone.
Open the door
Treatment with Howard S. Rudominer, MD, and his associate Phyllis Kream Kantrowitz, LCSW, is geared toward helping individuals, and families “open the door” back into themselves and turn their life in the right direction.
Find out more
the types of treatment offered to children, adolescents, adults, couples and families, and
specific problems and disorders that we treat.
a licensed psychiatric social worker
and a mental health nurse practitioner (MHNP)
A psychiatrist is a trained physician who has completed medical school. He or she then continues special training in the field of psychiatry much like other physicians receive specialized training in pediatrics or cardiology. Continued
About Dr. Rudominer
Howard S. Rudominer, MD is a Board Certified child, adolescent and adult psychiatrist and is an Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at NYU Medical Center. Continued
About Phyllis Kream Kantrowitz, LCSW
Phyllis Kream Kantrowitz is an licensed clinical social worker, psychotherapist and psychoanalyst with over 25 years of experience in private practice. Continued