Psychology Practice – Manhattan Center for Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
At 315 Madison Avenue, Suite 806, New York, NY 10017, the Manhattan Center for Cognitive Behavioral Therapy provides psychological services with a specialization in CBT for adults, teens, and children. The practice offers both in-person sessions and teletherapy, and states that appointments are typically available within one week.
The affiliated clinical staff includes Paul B. Greene, Ph.D. (Director), Justin Arocho, Ph.D. (Assistant Director), Amoha Bajaj-Mahajan, Ph.D., Rachel Chang, Ph.D., Anna Womack, Ph.D., and Hannah Jerushalmy, Psy.D. (Postdoctoral Fellow).
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy is the primary modality across all services. Conditions treated include anxiety, panic attacks, depression, social anxiety, health anxiety, and obsessive-compulsive disorder. The practice details multiple OCD presentations it works with, including contamination OCD, existential OCD, harm OCD, HOCD, hit-and-run OCD, pedophilic OCD, and relationship OCD. Additional conditions addressed include post-traumatic stress disorder, trauma, insomnia, trichotillomania, and dermatillomania (skin picking).
The practice emphasizes that the skills developed through CBT remain with clients after the conclusion of treatment, positioning them as lasting tools rather than session-dependent support. Services are available for adults, adolescents, and children, making the center a resource across age groups. The center also operates formal training programs including a CBT externship and a postdoctoral fellowship, reflecting an academic and supervisory component alongside direct clinical services.
Hannah Jerushalmy, Psy.D., holds the role of Postdoctoral Fellow, representing the training pipeline the center maintains. The doctoral-level composition of the core staff reflects a research-informed clinical orientation throughout the practice.
Educational resources on the website include downloadable worksheets, information on mindfulness practices, and a mental health blog covering topics such as PTSD treatment, managing intrusive thoughts, and comparisons between therapy modalities. These resources are publicly accessible and serve clients and prospective clients alike. Contact information includes phone (646-863-4225) and email at info@manhattancbt.com. Insurance and self-pay details are not specified on the main website page. Year established is not stated.