Services
What this practice treats, and how
Adult outpatient psychiatry delivered by secure video across Connecticut. Every service below is provided by the same board-certified psychiatrist, every time.
Comprehensive psychiatric evaluation
A diagnostic assessment across two 60-minute sessions on separate days, covering your full history, current symptoms, medical context, prior treatments, and goals. You receive a working formulation and a written plan, not just a diagnosis code.
Medication management
Ongoing follow-up visits of 25 to 50 minutes depending on need. Long enough to actually talk, track what matters, and adjust course thoughtfully rather than reflexively.
Therapy-informed care
Medication visits here include real psychotherapeutic work: examining patterns, building skills, and addressing the context symptoms live in. For patients who need dedicated weekly therapy, coordination with your therapist is standard practice.
Second opinions
A structured review of your diagnosis and medication regimen when treatment has stalled, side effects have accumulated, or the current explanation of your condition has never quite fit.
Deprescribing consultation
Careful, gradual simplification of complex medication regimens, with a plan for monitoring and clear criteria for when to pause or reverse course.
Care coordination
Communication with your therapist, primary care physician, and other clinicians, with your consent, so your care functions as one plan rather than several disconnected ones.
Conditions treated
Areas of focus
The practice treats adults, 18 and older, living in Connecticut.
Anxiety disorders
Generalized anxiety, panic disorder, social anxiety, and health anxiety.
Depression
Major depression, persistent depression, and treatment-resistant presentations.
ADHD
Careful adult ADHD evaluation, including distinguishing ADHD from the many conditions that mimic it.
OCD & related
Obsessive-compulsive disorder and related conditions, coordinated with ERP therapy where indicated.
Trauma & PTSD
Post-traumatic symptoms, with medication used to support rather than substitute for trauma-focused therapy.
Bipolar spectrum
Bipolar I and II and cyclothymic presentations, with an emphasis on accurate diagnosis before mood stabilization.
Insomnia
Behavioral and medical treatment of chronic insomnia, including reducing dependence on sleep medications.
Life transitions
Psychiatric support through career changes, loss, new parenthood, and other high-load seasons of life.
Scope and limits, stated plainly
Honest scope-setting is part of good care. This practice is not the right setting for:
- Psychiatric emergencies or active suicidal crisis, which require emergency services or a higher level of care
- Conditions that need frequent in-person examination or monitoring
- Primary treatment of moderate to severe substance use disorders, which deserve specialized programs
- Children and adolescents
- Court-ordered evaluations, disability evaluations, or forensic work
On controlled substances: prescribing of controlled medications by telehealth is governed by federal and state rules and by this practice's own clinical standards. Where a controlled medication is clinically appropriate, requirements such as identity verification, prescription monitoring checks, and periodic reassessment apply, and some situations may require an in-person evaluation or referral. This is discussed openly at your first visit. [REVIEW AND EDIT THIS PARAGRAPH TO MATCH YOUR CURRENT DEA/CT POLICY.]
Not sure if your situation fits?
Send a brief, non-clinical inquiry and you will get a straight answer about fit before you book.
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