Teen Anxiety Treatment offers specialized, evidence-based care for teens struggling with persistent worry, fear, stress, or anxiety that interferes with school, relationships, and daily life. At Light On Anxiety, our CBT-trained clinicians help teens build emotional regulation, confidence, and coping skills while supporting healthy independence during this critical developmental stage.
Teen anxiety treatment at Light On Anxiety focuses on helping teens ages 12–18 manage anxiety using proven, evidence-based approaches such as Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) and tailored medication management when appropriate. Our clinics in Chicago, Lakeview, Ravenswood, River North, Wilmette, Highland Park, Naperville, and Arlington Heights make it easy for families to access care close to home.
Anxiety in teens often looks different than anxiety in younger children. It may present as constant worry about school performance, social judgment, panic symptoms, avoidance, irritability, perfectionism, or physical symptoms like headaches, stomachaches, or fatigue. Our teen anxiety therapists specialize in working with adolescents in a way that respects their growing autonomy while providing structure, skills, and support.
CBT for teen anxiety is one of the most researched and effective treatments for anxiety disorders in adolescents, including generalized anxiety, social anxiety, panic disorder, and school-related anxiety.
CBT is adapted to teens’ developmental needs, helping them feel respected, understood, and actively involved in treatment. Sessions focus on practical tools teens can apply at school, at home, and in social settings, with an emphasis on independence and long-term skill building.
Reduces avoidance and anxiety-driven behaviors
Improves school performance and social engagement
Builds lifelong coping skills for stress and uncertainty
Supports long-term anxiety management
Medication options for teen anxiety may be considered when symptoms are moderate to severe or significantly impair daily functioning. At Light On Anxiety, medication is always paired with therapy and implemented collaboratively with teens, families, therapists, and prescribers.
Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRIs), and in some cases SNRIs, are commonly used to help reduce anxiety symptoms while therapy focuses on building coping skills and emotional flexibility. Our clinicians closely monitor progress to ensure the safest and most effective treatment plan.
Supporting teens with anxiety requires a different approach than supporting younger children. Parent coaching at Light On Anxiety helps families strike the right balance between support and independence.
Whether your teen is struggling with school anxiety, social anxiety, panic symptoms, or perfectionism, parents play a key role in reinforcing progress while respecting autonomy. Our approach helps families work together to support long-term emotional health.
Teen anxiety therapy typically includes CBT, exposure-based strategies, and skill-building exercises. Treatment is collaborative and focuses on helping teens understand and manage anxiety in real-life situations.
Treatment length varies, but many teens experience improvement within weeks to months. Progress depends on symptom severity, consistency, and engagement in therapy.
Some stress is normal, but persistent anxiety often worsens without intervention. Therapy helps prevent anxiety from becoming entrenched into adulthood.
When clinically appropriate and carefully monitored, medication can be safe and effective — especially when combined with therapy.
Signs include avoidance, excessive worry, panic symptoms, sleep disruption, irritability, academic decline, or withdrawal from social activities.
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) is one of the most researched and effective treatments for anxiety, OCD, and related mental health conditions. At Light On Anxiety, CBT is delivered in a structured, compassionate, and highly personalized way—designed to help individuals move from feeling stuck in fear to living with greater freedom, confidence, and emotional resilience.
Rather than focusing solely on insight or emotional expression, CBT helps individuals understand how their thoughts, behaviors, and physical sensations interact to maintain anxiety. From there, therapy becomes an active process of learning skills, practicing new responses, and gradually reclaiming areas of life that anxiety has limited.
This approach allows for meaningful progress in a relatively short period of time while building tools that continue to work long after therapy ends.
In CBT, anxiety is not viewed as a personal flaw or something that needs to be eliminated entirely. Instead, it is understood as a learned response—one that can be unlearned and reshaped through intentional practice.
CBT helps individuals:
Identify unhelpful thinking patterns that increase anxiety
Reduce avoidance and safety behaviors that keep fear alive
Learn to tolerate uncertainty and discomfort
Build confidence through gradual, supported action
Because CBT is structured and goal-oriented, clients know what they are working on, why they are doing it, and how it connects to their larger life goals.
Teen Anxiety Support
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