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In this episode of Therapists Unchained, host Sivie Suckerman, LMHC, ACS sits down with Kim Kabar, LMFT, to discuss the hidden dangers of the "uberification" of mental health care.
The conversation highlights a harrowing security breach where Kim’s deactivated Psychology Today account was hacked and altered, raising urgent questions about HIPAA compliance, data retention, and the vulnerability of private practice clinicians. Drawing on her background in investigative journalism, Kim exposes ethically concerning policies at venture-backed platforms like Grow Therapy, including requirements for client reviews and unauthorized management of therapist profiles.
Sivie and Kim conclude by discussing the necessity of legislative advocacy and how therapists can reclaim their autonomy through direct networking and independent contracting.
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Kim Kabar is a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist in California and Arizona specializing in trauma, attachment issues, and gender identity. An EMDR and ketamine-assisted psychotherapy provider, Kim is also a second-generation therapist. Her mother, now 87, is a practicing Jungian analyst in Chicago. Growing up immersed in conversations about mental health, trauma, and the therapeutic process profoundly shaped Kim’s reverence for the sanctity of the therapeutic relationship. Before becoming a clinician, Kim spent over a decade as a
journalist, a background that continues to shape her insistence on truth-seeking, pattern recognition, and asking uncomfortable questions about power, systems, and whose interests are really being served. Her current advocacy work focuses on how venture-backed mental health platforms and insurance-driven systems are reshaping therapy—often at the expense of client privacy and clinical integrity. When she’s not working, Kim loves to cook, go on bike rides, and play with her dog, Babette.
Kim also maintains a blog where she explores the ethical, emotional, and systemic realities of modern mental health care. Drawing on both her clinical work and her background in journalism, she writes about privacy, platform power, trauma-informed practice, and what happens when therapy is shaped by corporate and technological forces rather than human need.
Website: https://www.kimkabar.com
Blog: https://kimkabarlmft.wordpress.com
This episode was produced and edited by Sivie Suckerman, MA, LMHC, ACS
By Sivie Suckerman, MA, LMHC, ACSIn this episode of Therapists Unchained, host Sivie Suckerman, LMHC, ACS sits down with Kim Kabar, LMFT, to discuss the hidden dangers of the "uberification" of mental health care.
The conversation highlights a harrowing security breach where Kim’s deactivated Psychology Today account was hacked and altered, raising urgent questions about HIPAA compliance, data retention, and the vulnerability of private practice clinicians. Drawing on her background in investigative journalism, Kim exposes ethically concerning policies at venture-backed platforms like Grow Therapy, including requirements for client reviews and unauthorized management of therapist profiles.
Sivie and Kim conclude by discussing the necessity of legislative advocacy and how therapists can reclaim their autonomy through direct networking and independent contracting.
-----------
Kim Kabar is a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist in California and Arizona specializing in trauma, attachment issues, and gender identity. An EMDR and ketamine-assisted psychotherapy provider, Kim is also a second-generation therapist. Her mother, now 87, is a practicing Jungian analyst in Chicago. Growing up immersed in conversations about mental health, trauma, and the therapeutic process profoundly shaped Kim’s reverence for the sanctity of the therapeutic relationship. Before becoming a clinician, Kim spent over a decade as a
journalist, a background that continues to shape her insistence on truth-seeking, pattern recognition, and asking uncomfortable questions about power, systems, and whose interests are really being served. Her current advocacy work focuses on how venture-backed mental health platforms and insurance-driven systems are reshaping therapy—often at the expense of client privacy and clinical integrity. When she’s not working, Kim loves to cook, go on bike rides, and play with her dog, Babette.
Kim also maintains a blog where she explores the ethical, emotional, and systemic realities of modern mental health care. Drawing on both her clinical work and her background in journalism, she writes about privacy, platform power, trauma-informed practice, and what happens when therapy is shaped by corporate and technological forces rather than human need.
Website: https://www.kimkabar.com
Blog: https://kimkabarlmft.wordpress.com
This episode was produced and edited by Sivie Suckerman, MA, LMHC, ACS