What's Offered

Psychiatric services,
clearly explained.

Four core services, supporting all your mental health concerns whether they be related to anxiety, ADHD, depression, mood disturbances, or something else. Here's what each one involves and whether it might be right for you.

Psychiatric Evaluation

A psychiatric evaluation is the starting point for care. It's a 60-minute appointment where a thorough history is taken — your mental health background, medical history, family history, current symptoms, and what's brought you in now.

This isn't a questionnaire read back to you. It's a conversation. The approach is specific questions, careful listening, and building a clinical picture that's accurate to you — not a checklist.

At the end, the findings are discussed — what the diagnosis means in practical terms, and what the options are. You leave with a clear understanding of where things stand and what comes next.

Who this is for: Anyone seeking a psychiatric assessment for the first time, a second opinion, or a fresh start with a new provider.

Medication Management

When medication is part of a care plan, it requires more than a prescription. Psychiatric medications take time to work, may need adjustment, and can interact with other medications or health conditions. Follow-up visits exist specifically to manage this.

At each medication management appointment, the focus is on how you're responding, whether doses need adjustment, and whether the medication is still the right fit. Each visit also checks in on how you're doing overall — side effects, sleep, function, mood.

Nothing will be changed without a conversation. If something isn't working for you, it will be addressed directly until something does.

Who this is for: Patients who have completed an evaluation and are beginning, continuing, or adjusting psychiatric medication.

Treatment Planning

A treatment plan is a structured outline of how your care will be approached. It documents the diagnosis, the goals of treatment, the interventions to be used, and how progress will be measured. It keeps care organized and intentional.

Treatment plans are built collaboratively. Your input matters — what you're hoping to achieve, what you've tried before, what feels feasible given your life. A plan that doesn't account for your actual circumstances isn't a useful plan.

Treatment plans are living documents. They're revisited and updated as your needs evolve, not filed away after the first session.

Who this is for: All patients. Treatment planning is part of every ongoing care relationship, not a separate service you have to request.

Supportive Psychiatric Care

Supportive psychiatric care is what ongoing mental health treatment looks like in practice. It's the regular appointments — typically monthly or every few months — where progress is tracked, what's come up is addressed, and the overall care plan is kept current.

Effective care is built on an ongoing relationship — understanding your history, recognizing patterns, and following your progress over time. This allows for thoughtful adjustments, early response when something isn't working, and keeping things moving in the right direction.

That continuity matters. Psychiatric conditions often fluctuate, and having a provider who knows your baseline makes a real difference when things shift.

Who this is for: Patients with established diagnoses who benefit from consistent psychiatric follow-up over months or years.

You don't have to have it all figured out.

Start with an evaluation. We'll figure out the rest together.

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