Specialty Populations
Corporate Psychiatry
High performing professionals and executives carry relentless demands: long hours, high stakes, constant decisions, and a culture that rarely makes room for struggle. shrinkMD provides discreet, flexible psychiatric care built for that reality.
Medically reviewed by Shariq Refai, MD, MBA, FAPA, board certified psychiatrist · Published June 7, 2026 · Last reviewed June 8, 2026 · Editorial policy

What we help with
Common concerns for professionals
High achievers often push through until something breaks. We help before and after that point with:
- Burnout, exhaustion, and loss of drive
- Chronic stress and anxiety
- Depression and mood changes that hide behind productivity
- Sleep disruption and overwork
- Performance pressure and the fear of slowing down
How it works
Discreet, flexible care
Schedule that respects your calendar
Secure video visits that fit between meetings and travel, without a waiting room.
Accurate evaluation
A thorough assessment that separates burnout from depression, anxiety, or other conditions.
A practical plan
Therapy coordination and non controlled medication when appropriate, designed for a demanding life.
Private and continuous
Confidential, HIPAA compliant care with continuity over time.

High performance and mental health aren't at odds. They depend on each other.
The executive pattern
High functioning is not the same as well
Professionals often perform competently long after symptoms start, which delays care by years. The pattern is recognizable: work output holds while sleep, patience, focus, and home life quietly erode. Burnout and depression also get confused, and the distinction matters because burnout improves with rest and boundary changes while depression follows you into vacation.
An evaluation sorts out which one you are facing, and whether anxiety, mood, attention, or sleep is the real driver underneath.
Discreet and efficient
Care that fits a working calendar
Appointments run on time over secure video and fit between meetings. Because we do not bill insurance, no diagnosis enters an insurer database, and nothing touches workplace systems. Treatment plans respect cognitive performance: we choose medications with attention to alertness, focus, and sleep, and we measure results the way you would expect of anything else that matters.
Most patients keep their first follow up under thirty minutes and their treatment entirely their own business.
Sorting it out
Burnout, depression, or both
Burnout improves with rest, boundaries, and changes at work, because work is its cause. Depression keeps following you into weekends, vacations, and the job you switched to in order to fix it. The two also coexist: chronic burnout is a credible on ramp to clinical depression.
The distinction is not academic. Treating burnout as depression medicates a systems problem; treating depression as burnout sends a sick person on a sabbatical that will not work. An evaluation tells them apart.
Cognition
Performance is a vital sign worth protecting
For senior professionals, the earliest symptoms are often cognitive: slower decisions, second guessing, 3 a.m. waking with a racing problem list, and a drink that became two to switch off at night. Anxiety can masquerade as drive for years before it starts charging interest.
Treatment choices respect what your role demands. We select medications with attention to alertness, decision quality, and sleep architecture, and we measure results, because you would not accept unmeasured performance anywhere else.
Timing
Signs the white knuckling phase is over
Most executives come in two years later than they should. Markers that the wait is over:
- Sunday evenings bring dread rather than reset
- Sleep ends at 3 or 4 a.m. with your mind already at work
- Patience at home has shortened noticeably, and people have said so
- Alcohol has become the off switch
- Work that used to energize you now only depletes you
- You have started avoiding decisions you would once have made in an hour
Keep exploring
Related care and next steps
Frequently asked questions
Good questions, clear answers
Is care confidential from my employer?
Yes. Care is private and HIPAA compliant. Your treatment is between you and your clinician.
How is burnout different from depression?
They overlap but aren't the same. Burnout is tied to chronic work stress, while depression is a broader medical condition. A careful evaluation tells them apart and shapes the plan.
Do you prescribe controlled medication?
No. We use non controlled medications and coordinated therapy.
Is this executive coaching?
No. This is medical psychiatric care: diagnosis, treatment, and measured follow up. It pairs well with coaching, but it addresses the conditions coaching cannot, like clinical depression, anxiety disorders, and sleep disorders.
Will treatment show up on my employer's insurance?
No. We do not bill insurance, so there is no claim, no diagnosis code in a carrier database, and nothing visible to an employer sponsored plan.
Can appointments fit a packed calendar?
Yes. Follow ups typically run 15 to 30 minutes by video, scheduled early, late, or between commitments, and they start on time. Most executives treat them like any other standing meeting.
How quickly can treatment make a difference in a demanding quarter?
Sleep and anxiety interventions often help within one to two weeks. Antidepressants typically take two to six weeks. Either way, you will know early whether the plan is working, because we measure progress at every visit.
What if my main concern is confidential, like board pressure or public scrutiny?
That stays in the room. High visibility roles carry distinctive stressors, and your clinician has no relationship with your company, your board, or your investors. The privacy is structural, not just promised.
Get started with corporate psychiatry
Performance depends on wellbeing. Choose your state, complete the intake, and book your evaluation online.
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