Meet Erin McNamee

Erin McNamee is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker who has been in clinical practice in Florida since 2006. She has worked in the field of addiction treatment for ten years, most recently serving as the Chief Clinical Officer for a local women’s treatment center.

Since then, she has been helping people heal trauma and work through an array of mental health concerns with an integrative, person-centered approach to therapy. She creates a tailored experience for her patients, taking into mind the unique life experience of each individual. Her work is centered around understanding the root cause of issues and allowing healing and growth to happen through a range of therapeutic modalities.

Erin has trained extensively in EMDR and psychodrama and received her certification in equine therapy through the Equine Assisted Growth and Learning Association (EAGALA) in 2012. Completing her Master of Social Work degree from Barry University in 2007, she then earned her Doctor of Social Work from Florida Atlantic University in the summer of 2020 studying barriers to treating substance use disorder.

Erin currently maintains a private practice in Boca Raton and Delray Beach, Florida, specializing in trauma, addiction, and codependency.


My mission is to make mental health concepts accessible to as many people as possible. I like to teach people how to pay attention to their own system for direction on what to do. Our bodies and our emotions provide so much great information to us, but we’ve been taught to over-rely on our minds for information.
— Erin McNamee

As a therapist, Erin approaches her work based on what the client wants to achieve in therapy. She helps them identify goals and establishes a map on how to achieve the ideal outcome. Everything is done with strategy and reason, with the end goal in mind. 

Her integrative approach blends and combines different modalities to best suit the individual’s unique situation and response system. Her specialties include treating trauma, PTSD, addiction, codependency, anxiety, and depression.