My name is Agnieszka Jakubiczka, and I’m a psychotherapist with a Master of Psychology from the Jagiellonian University. While pursuing my degree and building my professional expertise, I have completed an extensive four-year programme at the Jagiellonian University Medical College. Over the course of my professional career, I worked as a psychotherapist at the Psychotherapy Unit of the University Hospital in Krakow, where I led both group and individual therapy sessions.
In my daily practice with patients, I leverage the psychodynamic psychotherapy approach while also using psychoanalytic methods and cognitive behavioral therapy techniques. Within the realm of the specifics of psychodynamic psychotherapy, it provides a safe space for the patient, with the therapist not defining nor imposing any leading themes in the conversation. The sessions begin with discussing the problems and issues that the patients themselves signal and raise. This might pose a challenge to many people, but in that particular therapeutic approach it’s fundamental for the patient to be able to share with a therapist what they feel is important. Psychodynamic therapy assumes that various problems and anxieties that people deal with are due to the unconscious internal conflicts. The goal of psychodynamic therapy is to identify those conflicts and subsequently to work with the therapist on solving them, which improves the patient’s well-being and functioning.
This kind of therapy may interest different people — from those that deal with daily anxieties and difficulties in functioning to patients with diverse mental disorders. The method can help treat various conditions, such as depressive disorders, anxiety disorders, eating disorders, personality disorders.
My patients are welcome to participate in individual therapy sessions face-to-face or entirely online.
The meetings can be held in two languages: Polish and English.
I meet with patients: on Thursdays and Fridays from 9 AM to 1 PM.
Each session lasts 50 minutes.
The first 1–3 meetings serve as consultations. The objective is to diagnose difficulties that the patient comes with and develop the framework for further treatment, should a decision to start psychotherapeutic work be made.
Ask about available appointments, and within 24 hours you will receive a message confirming your selected session was booked or proposing an alternate one if your preferred time and date were not available anymore.
A counselling session can be cancelled no later than 48 hours prior to the scheduled appointment.