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Raganya Ponmanadiyil, MA, MEd

Registered Psychotherapist

Raganya Ponmanadiyil is a Registered Psychotherapist with the College of Registered Psychotherapists of Ontario. She holds a Master of Arts in Counselling Psychology from Yorkville University, and a Master of Education in Developmental Psychology from the University of Toronto (OISE), and a Bachelor of Science in Psychology, Neuroscience, and Behaviour from McMaster University.

Raganya has been supporting children, adolescents, adults, and families with a range of mental health concerns since 2016. She has worked in school, home, and community-based settings, initially providing Applied Behaviour Analysis (ABA) therapy of children and youth diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder. She later transitioned into psychotherapy to provide further support to individuals experiencing life and relational challenges.

Raganya creates a supportive and compassionate space where clients feel understood and valued. She takes a collaborative and personalized approach, ensuring that therapy is tailored to each individual’s needs. Utilizing techniques from cognitive-behavioural, acceptance and commitment, dialectical behaviour, and solution-focused therapies, she helps clients navigate their challenges, develop coping strategies, and foster personal growth. Raganya is committed to helping individuals work through concerns related to anxiety, depression, self-worth, emotional regulation, relationship challenges, and emotional well-being, empowering them to make meaningful changes in their lives.


Dalton Associates (DA) and Launch Behavioural Health acknowledge that we are situated on Turtle Island, that has been inhabited by Indigenous Peoples from the beginning. As a settler-owned organization, we are always working on de-colonizing our practices and offering mental health services that reflect a wholistic approach to health and wellness. Our clients come from a variety of backgrounds, and include First Nations, Métis, and Inuit peoples. We want to do more than make a difference at an individual level: we aspire to support a societal shift in the way that mental health is addressed and cared for, and we believe that a cross-cultural approach, bringing Indigenous worldviews to the forefront, is necessary to help break the system and rebuild it in a way that promotes healthy wellbeing for future generations. We are actively engaged in changing the landscape of mental health care in Ontario, by augmenting (and compensating) the voices and experiences of Indigenous knowledge keepers, and by incorporating Indigenous values and teachings in our program models.