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Specialized Counseling Available
To support you with wellness, stress, and burnout

Looking for support in managing the stressors associated with police work?
Frustrated with NOT having mental health providers that understand law enforcement?
When you see a therapist, you want to know they get the unique challenges of your profession. Due to a specialized training, more mental health professionals in Minnesota are now available to connect law enforcement officers and their families with qualified support.
These independent therapists (not EAP) can assist you with:
- Wellness & self-care
- On-the-job coping strategies
- Burnout and occupational stress
- Secondary trauma symptoms
- Work & Family Relationships
- Addictive Behaviors
- Managing public criticism
- Depression, anxiety, and other mental health challenges
*Search by County, Name and Service format (In-person or Telehealth)
Program Background & Disclaimer
This website directory contains referrals to licensed mental health professionals in Minnesota who received special training in 2024-25 to more effectively counsel law enforcement officers and their families. These counselors were trained by the Adler Graduate School, a grantee of the MN Department of Public Safety Office of Justice Programs.
DISCLAIMER: The provider referral list on this website contains the names and contact information of licensed mental health clinicians who completed 36 hours of training on how to best meet the mental health needs of Minnesota Peace Officers and their families.
The 36 hours of content covered law enforcement history, culture, job/life stressors, family dynamics, appropriate diagnostic assessment, current evidence-based treatment options, ethical implications, and overall best practices for clinical treatment. Instructors providing the training curriculum consisted of experts in the fields of both clinical therapy and law enforcement work.
Although the training was limited to mental health professionals licensed in the State of Minnesota (or dual licensed in MN and other states), neither Adler Graduate School or its employees nor the Minnesota Department of Public Safety or its employees can guarantee the ethical delivery or clinical effectiveness of any third-party clinician’s services. Additionally, neither Adler Graduate School nor the Minnesota Department of Public Safety can guarantee that any third-party clinician will remain in good standing with the Minnesota Board of Behavioral Health and Therapy with regard to licensure renewals and/or ethical or moral infractions deemed unsatisfactory by the MBBHT.
Furthermore, all training attendees were notified both verbally and in writing that successful completion of the 36-hour training should in no way be construed to be evidence of a formal certification of competence, as accredited by a qualified credentialing body, with regard to clinical services in the context of treating law enforcement personnel or their families. As with any referral list, it is always suggested that those clients referred contact referral third parties and inquire as to current licensure status.
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