About Dr Nadia Boscaglia

My name is Dr Nadia Boscaglia. I'm a Clinical Psychologist, Board-Approved Supervisor, and Somatic Sexologist with over 20 years of clinical experience.

Bosca Health looks, at first glance, like an eclectic collection of services. Perimenopause. Clinical supervision. Somatic sexology. Therapeutic decluttering. Group therapy. What ties them together isn't a theme, it's a method. Plus the fact that they’re my passion areas. Every piece of work I do here involves helping someone take stock of what they have, let go of what no longer serves them, and reorganise what remains into something functional and liveable. That's true whether we're working with a cluttered house, a stalled clinical career, a body in hormonal flux, or a relationship to pleasure that's been neglected for a decade.

My clinical career has been focused on women's mental health across hormonally sensitive periods - from menstrual-related mood disorders through to perimenopausal depression and beyond. My early research examined body image in pregnancy; my doctoral work focused on mood and anxiety in the context of gynaecological cancers. Over time, my interest narrowed to hormonal transitions across the lifespan.

I use ACT, CBT, EMDR, Schema Therapy, and somatic approaches in clinical work. I've published in reproductive mental health, lectured at Monash and Victoria University, and trained GPs and psychologists nationally to recognise and respond to hormone-related mood disorders.

From 2005 to 2025, I built and led a ten-clinician psychology practice, which I sold in 2025 to a wonderful woman who will do it justice. That transition freed me to concentrate on the areas that I had developed a passion for over my years of clinical practice.

At Bosca Health, I supervise and train clinicians, run group therapy for women navigating perimenopause, see clients for somatic sex coaching, and work with individuals who need therapeutic support to sort out their space.

I still maintain a caseload of individual therapy clients at Coburg Clinical Psychology. If you're looking for 1:1 sessions, contact that practice directly, and if I'm unavailable, the clinicians I supervise there are genuinely excellent.

Bosca comes from bosco — the Italian word for forest, and the first five letters of my surname. Forests look, from the outside, like they're just sitting there. They're not. Root systems are reorganising, decomposing matter is becoming new soil, space is being made for what comes next. What looks like stillness is usually structure in progress.

That's the logic behind my work here. Whether we’re working on your sense of self during a hormonal transition, a clinical practice that needs sharpening, a relationship to your body and its pleasure, or a home that has gotten away from you, the goal is the same. Not erasure. Reorganisation.