TelePsychiatry Services
Our online therapists specialize in a wide range of conditions, including Anxiety, Depression, ADHD, Bipolar Disorders, PTSD and more.
Anxiety
Everyone feels stressed sometimes. This is completely natural. It is caused by your body’s “fight or flight” response that sets off warning bells when you feel like you are in danger. But sometimes the anxiety can be excessive, like when you have an anxiety disorder. If you have an anxiety disorder, the feelings of stress are not just temporary or occasional feelings, they are feelings that you feel every day that get worse over time.
Anxiety disorders are extremely common. 40 million adults in the United States alone suffer from it every year.
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Who provides palliative care?Our team of palliative care specialists consists of Nurse Practitioners.
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Where is palliative care provided?Wherever the patient receives care, they can also receive palliative care. This includes the patient’s own home, assisted living facility, a hospital, or outpatient clinics. We provide palliative care in every area that we serve.
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When can you start palliative care?Palliative care can be a good option for patients at any stage of illness. Patients who are diagnosed with serious illnesses can start palliative care very early on in their illnesses’ progression. Regardless of whether patients are receiving curative treatments, or life-prolonging treatments, palliative care can benefit all patients.
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How can palliative care help?Palliative care is specialized care that can help patients who are suffering from devastating chronic illnesses. It can help with the life-altering symptoms of these chronic illnesses, such as pain, shortness of breath, fatigue, constipation, nausea and vomiting, loss of appetite, and difficulty sleeping.
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How can you pay for palliative care?Palliative care is paid for the same way as any other medical care that is provided by your insurance, or government benefits. Because palliative care is considered a specialty, paying for it is the same as if your doctor referred you to any other specialist. As with any other specialist visit, your insurance policy will dictate your responsibilities such as copayments or deductibles.
ADHD
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder is a mental disorder that makes it difficult to focus, hold still, or control behavior. This condition is most prevalent in children, but it can persist into adulthood, and sometimes, the symptoms are not present until adulthood.
About 5% of adults have been diagnosed with ADHD. This means that the number of adults who actually have ADHD is much higher. Most cases are not ever reported, because the symptoms are ignored, or adults do not feel comfortable seeking treatment for a disorder that a lot of people think can be “cured” by “trying harder.”
A significant amount of children have ADHD, which means that those children probably take it with them into adulthood. However, some children learn how to manage the disorder. But other times, when adults are diagnosed with ADHD, it becomes clear that they have suffered from the disorder since they were children, but its symptoms were not really a problem until they reached adulthood.
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Who provides palliative care?Our team of palliative care specialists consists of Nurse Practitioners.
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Where is palliative care provided?Wherever the patient receives care, they can also receive palliative care. This includes the patient’s own home, assisted living facility, a hospital, or outpatient clinics. We provide palliative care in every area that we serve.
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When can you start palliative care?Palliative care can be a good option for patients at any stage of illness. Patients who are diagnosed with serious illnesses can start palliative care very early on in their illnesses’ progression. Regardless of whether patients are receiving curative treatments, or life-prolonging treatments, palliative care can benefit all patients.
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How can palliative care help?Palliative care is specialized care that can help patients who are suffering from devastating chronic illnesses. It can help with the life-altering symptoms of these chronic illnesses, such as pain, shortness of breath, fatigue, constipation, nausea and vomiting, loss of appetite, and difficulty sleeping.
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How can you pay for palliative care?Palliative care is paid for the same way as any other medical care that is provided by your insurance, or government benefits. Because palliative care is considered a specialty, paying for it is the same as if your doctor referred you to any other specialist. As with any other specialist visit, your insurance policy will dictate your responsibilities such as copayments or deductibles.
Clinical Depression
Clinical depression is a mental disorder that makes its victims feel sad or apathetic for periods of around 2 weeks. However, the disorder is more than just feeling sad. Living with depression can change how you think, act, and feel. People who suffer from depression often lose interest in activities that they used to enjoy, or feel completely unmotivated to do anything at all, including getting out of bed.
16 million Americans suffer from depression, but 35% of these people will never seek treatment. This is usually because the depression itself can make you unmotivated to try to solve the depression. Seeking help is a necessary step; depression does not just go away on its own.
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Who provides palliative care?Our team of palliative care specialists consists of Nurse Practitioners.
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Where is palliative care provided?Wherever the patient receives care, they can also receive palliative care. This includes the patient’s own home, assisted living facility, a hospital, or outpatient clinics. We provide palliative care in every area that we serve.
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When can you start palliative care?Palliative care can be a good option for patients at any stage of illness. Patients who are diagnosed with serious illnesses can start palliative care very early on in their illnesses’ progression. Regardless of whether patients are receiving curative treatments, or life-prolonging treatments, palliative care can benefit all patients.
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How can palliative care help?Palliative care is specialized care that can help patients who are suffering from devastating chronic illnesses. It can help with the life-altering symptoms of these chronic illnesses, such as pain, shortness of breath, fatigue, constipation, nausea and vomiting, loss of appetite, and difficulty sleeping.
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How can you pay for palliative care?Palliative care is paid for the same way as any other medical care that is provided by your insurance, or government benefits. Because palliative care is considered a specialty, paying for it is the same as if your doctor referred you to any other specialist. As with any other specialist visit, your insurance policy will dictate your responsibilities such as copayments or deductibles.
Contact us for mental health expertise and guidance.
It's OK to ask for help.
Our goal is to help you easily ask for help by providing online appointments and prescription management services. Getting help from a mental health professional will help you improve your mood, manage your symptoms, and help you live life to the fullest.
You don’t have to be alone, we’re here to help.
Contact us today to improve your mental health.