Who We Are

MindNet represents a team of trained psychologists and therapists with diverse clinical roots, varied ethnic and cultural backgrounds, and a shared commitment to depth, integrity, and human connection.

Our collaborative space

We know that taking the step toward therapy requires courage, and that finding the right group can feel overwhelming. Questions about timing, format, language, and therapeutic focus can easily become obstacles in themselves.

MindNet is designed to make this process easy, clear and intuitive. Whether you are looking for a group in a specific language, at a particular time of day, or around a certain theme, we help you navigate your options with ease.

At MindNet, you can explore a selection of carefully chosen groups to find the one that best matches your needs and preferences.

The opportunity to connect with others

"Knowing that others might share similar experiences can be very comforting and reduce feelings of isolation. Sharing your own story in group therapy helps with healing and overcoming difficulties."

Also interacting with people who have not had the same experiences can be very helpful, as it offers an alternative perspective on your own challenges, supporting change. By learning how other people face the same challenge by making positive changes, you can discover new strategies for facing your own.

At MindNet we view therapy as a collaborative process.

Every day, more apps and platforms designed for connection are developed than at any other point in human history. Yet study after study tells us the same thing: we are more isolated, more disconnected, and more out of balance than ever before.

We don't think another app is the solution. That's why we created MindNet. Why are we different? Because we believe in the power of human presence.

Our mission is simple: create safe spaces where people can understand, voice, and heal with other human beings.

Not through a screen. Not through a chatbot. Not alone. Together.

Denmark already understands the value of "fællesskab" — that is, community. It is embedded into how we think about education, housing, and civic life. We want to apply that same instinct to mental health.

Plenty of research supports it, and most of us feel it intuitively: we are wired for community. We always have been. And at MindNet we believe group therapy is one of the most important investments we can make right now.

Real presence. Real change

*References

Moore et al. (2025). Expressing stigma and inappropriate responses prevents LLMs from safely replacing mental health providers. https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2504.18412

Scholich et al. (2025). A Comparison of Responses from Human Therapists and Large Language Model–Based Chatbots to Assess Therapeutic Communication: Mixed Methods Study. 10.2196/69709

Girault et al. (2024). Changes in loneliness prevalence in Denmark in the 21st century: Age-period-cohort analysis. 10.1177/14034948231182188

Head R. (2025). Minds in Crisis: How the AI Revolution is Impacting Mental Health. 10.29245/2578-2959/2025/3.1352

Schnepf et al. (2024). Loneliness in Europe. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-66582-0