I've been thinking for a while that an actual therapist position would be both nice to have for game play reasons and kind of sweet to watch play out.
It would be a position appointed similar to a manager. The therapist would like access to writing material, storage for their written notes, a table, and seating for the therapist and the client.
Possible features for the therapist:
* Prescribed time off work or time off duty for mentally unwell dwarves.
* Informing the player of problems held by enough clients as to be significant:
- the absence of religious spaces
- the absence of satisfactory eating spaces or tableware
- the lack of material goods or dietary variety
* A treatment plan, from therapist to client, in the medical tab:
- Describing what particular work a dwarf really wants to do, in terms of neglected labor, social skills or military
- Suggested course of action for such unmet needs
* Facilitation of written communication between clients, messengers, and loved ones offsite
- This is for dwarves that miss their family and are pining for contact.
* More generalized therapeutic sessions in which clients can vent about their trauma, loss, petty grudges and annoyances.
* A slight and chronic toll on an overworked therapist, with the ability to zone out a larger area and to designate multiple therapists and offices the same way you would a hospital.
- Zoned as a "practice"
- Offices within the zone are treated as the working areas for the therapist
- spaces outside of that in the zone are treated as a waiting room.
- If it's not too much fluff, a receptionist can be designated to seat clients, prompt the therapists in the practice to work, and to train soft social skills for the receptionist for later promotion to a quasi-noble such as broker, manager, therapist
In terms of prescribed time off work, this would happen with the input of the player. It would be similar in presentation to a petition and would inform the player of the dwarf in treatment and the proposed time off. Dwarves granted this time feel relief, and both the therapist and client are irritated if this time is not granted off.