loading

Our services

Our services provide comprehensive mental health and wellness care that supports emotional balance, clear thinking, and better daily functioning. Care is personalized to each person, not just a diagnosis. We offer thorough evaluations, treatment planning, medication management when appropriate, and coordination with therapy and behavioral supports.

Anxiety Treatment

Anxiety disorders go beyond temporary stress, creating excessive worry and physiological symptoms that interfere with daily life. Chronic anxiety disrupts mood, concentration, and the ability to relax, often leading to restlessness or avoidance behaviors.

Common Symptoms

  • Emotional & Cognitive: Persistent dread, racing thoughts, “catastrophizing,” and difficulty controlling the internal narrative.
  • Physical & Behavioral: Tight chest, rapid heartbeat, chronic restlessness, sleep disruptions, and avoiding triggers.

Age-Specific Impact

  • Young Adults (18–35): Centers on future dread, identity shifts, and social pressure. It often involves overanalyzing social interactions and avoiding gatherings due to fear of judgment.
  • Adults (35–65): Often manifests as burnout, somatic tension (headaches/fatigue), and an inability to “switch off” mentally. Many use perfectionism or overworking to manage an internal sense of chaos.

Treatment includes comprehensive psychiatric evaluation, medication management, and therapy collaboration. The goal is to restore emotional balance, improve energy, and help individuals reconnect with a sense of purpose and well-being.

ADHD Assessment

Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is a neurodevelopmental condition affecting focus, impulse control, and executive functioning. It goes beyond occasional distraction, often disrupting productivity, organization, and emotional regulation in work, school, and relationships.

Common Symptoms

Cognitive & Emotional: Chronic procrastination, difficulty sustaining attention, racing or scattered thoughts, forgetfulness, emotional sensitivity, and feeling overwhelmed by simple tasks.

Behavioral & Functional: Losing items frequently, poor time management, interrupting others, restlessness, unfinished projects, and inconsistent performance despite strong ability.

Age-Specific Impact

Young Adults (18–35): Academic struggles, job instability, difficulty maintaining routines, and emotional burnout from “trying harder” without results.

Adults (35–65): Career underperformance relative to potential, chronic disorganization, financial mismanagement, relationship tension, and reliance on last-minute pressure to function.

Treatment includes structured assessment, medication when appropriate, behavioral strategies, and executive-function coaching to improve daily performance and reduce mental overload.

Bipolar Depression

Bipolar depression is part of bipolar disorder and involves depressive episodes that alternate with periods of elevated or irritable mood (mania or hypomania). It is often misdiagnosed as major depression, but requires different treatment approaches.

Common Symptoms

Emotional & Cognitive: Deep sadness, hopelessness, guilt, slowed thinking, indecisiveness, and loss of motivation.

Physical & Behavioral: Sleep changes (too much or too little), appetite changes, fatigue, withdrawal, and reduced activity levels.

Age-Specific Impact

Young Adults (18–35): Mood instability can affect identity development, education, and relationships. Risk-taking during elevated phases may lead to consequences.

Adults (35–65): Cycles may impact career stability, finances, and long-term relationships. Depressive phases often feel heavier and longer with age.

Treatment focuses on mood stabilization through medication, therapy, and careful monitoring to prevent mood swings and restore emotional consistency.

Depression Treatment

Depression is more than sadness — it’s a persistent mood condition that impacts thinking, energy, motivation, and physical health, often making everyday tasks feel exhausting.

Common Symptoms

Emotional & Cognitive: Persistent low mood, hopelessness, irritability, negative self-talk, poor concentration, and loss of interest in previously enjoyable activities.

Physical & Behavioral: Sleep disturbances, appetite changes, fatigue, slowed movement, social withdrawal, and decreased productivity.

Age-Specific Impact

Young Adults (18–35): Often linked to identity uncertainty, social comparison, and life transitions. May appear as isolation or loss of direction.

Adults (35–65): Can show as burnout, emotional numbness, chronic fatigue, and feeling trapped in responsibilities without relief.

Treatment may include therapy, medication, and lifestyle interventions to restore energy, emotional balance, and engagement with life.

Medication Management (MAT)

Medication management ensures psychiatric medications are used safely, effectively, and in alignment with personal goals and symptom changes over time.

What It Addresses

Monitoring & Adjustment: Evaluating effectiveness, managing side effects, adjusting dosages, and ensuring medications support daily functioning.

Safety & Education: Understanding interactions, long-term planning, and empowering patients to make informed treatment decisions.

Who Benefits

Individuals with anxiety, depression, ADHD, mood disorders, trauma-related conditions, or other psychiatric concerns requiring pharmacological support.

The goal is symptom stability, improved quality of life, and minimizing unnecessary medication burden.

Mood Disorder

Mood disorders involve persistent disruptions in emotional regulation, including depressive, bipolar, and related conditions that affect energy, motivation, and daily functioning.

Common Symptoms

Emotional & Cognitive: Mood swings, irritability, sadness, emotional numbness, racing thoughts, or difficulty regulating emotions.

Physical & Behavioral: Sleep and appetite changes, fatigue, impulsive decisions, withdrawal, or restlessness.

Age-Specific Impact

Young Adults (18–35): Emotional highs and lows may affect identity, education, and social relationships.

Adults (35–65): Mood instability can show as burnout, chronic stress, strained relationships, and difficulty maintaining work-life balance.

Treatment often combines medication, therapy, and lifestyle stabilization strategies to improve emotional consistency.

PTSD Treatment

PTSD develops after experiencing or witnessing trauma and involves ongoing nervous system hyperarousal, intrusive memories, and emotional avoidance.

Common Symptoms

Emotional & Cognitive: Flashbacks, nightmares, hypervigilance, emotional numbness, guilt, and difficulty feeling safe.

Physical & Behavioral: Sleep disturbance, exaggerated startle response, avoidance of reminders, irritability, and tension.

Age-Specific Impact

Young Adults (18–35): Trauma may interfere with independence, trust, and relationship formation.

Adults (35–65): Often present as chronic anxiety, emotional detachment, and persistent survival-mode thinking.

Treatment includes trauma-informed therapy, nervous system regulation skills, and medication when needed to reduce hyperarousal and improve daily stability.

Weight Loss Management

Weight management in a medical setting addresses biological, behavioral, and emotional factors that influence metabolism, appetite, and long-term health.

Common Challenges

Biological: Hormonal influences, metabolic resistance, medication-related weight gain.

Behavioral & Emotional: Stress eating, inconsistent habits, emotional eating patterns, and difficulty maintaining routines.

Age-Specific Impact

Young Adults (18–35): Often focused on body image, energy, and lifestyle habits.

Adults (35–65): Metabolic slowing, stress, and hormonal changes make weight loss more complex.

Treatment may include medical evaluation, nutrition planning, behavioral support, and medication when appropriate to promote sustainable, healthy weight changes.