Our practice is established around the concept of quality of care and positive outcomes. Our team of highly qualified medical professionals are instrumental in bringing together a positive patient experience with timely and accurate evaluations.
Our experience enables us to offer effective outpatient, individualized, psychological care. We treat a number of mental health disorders, and provide a neutral ground to individuals, families, and couples.
Our focus is to help individuals heal, energize, and become aware of their inner strengths. We achieve this by providing a neutral safe space, listening to your concerns, and customizing a treatment plan.
We promise to be there for you every step of your journey. Our goal is to help you grow from your struggles, heal from your pain, and move forward to where you want to be in your life.
Psychotherapy is a patient-centered modality that uses a compassionate approach to help the patient identify strengths as well as triggers and develop appropriate coping mechanisms. It is at the heart of much of the behavioral health treatment conducted in the U.S.
Every program of psychotherapy is different, and depends on the unique characteristics and needs of the patient. This specific approach allows patient and therapist to find the best answer for the patient’s needs.
There are a wide range of psychotherapy techniques available to patients. Popular types of psychotherapy as well as some of the conditions they treat are listed below:
In many cases, patients may benefit from some combination of different types of therapy. Mental health professionals may also recommend supplementing a course of therapy with additional interventions such as medication or lifestyle changes.
Cognitive behavioral therapy is a popular type of therapy used in the treatment of multiple mental disorders. In a CBT session, the patient and therapist work together to uncover patterns of thinking and actions that interfere with the patient’s quality of life. The patient can then learn ways to stop these destructive thoughts and actions.
CBT was developed by Dr. Aaron T. Beck in the 1960s as a response to what he saw as deficits in psychotherapy when it came to treating depression. Dr. Beck noted that depressive patients had a tendency towards automatic thinking that focused on negative traits they had come to believe about themselves. Dr. Beck worked to develop techniques that would help these patients transform this negative thinking into positive thinking.
Many mental health researchers now study the applications of CBT and therapists use this form of psychotherapy in countless offices across the country. CBT has not only transformed therapy, it has also transformed the lives of many patients with mood disorders.
More and more people are becoming familiar with Telehealth, a process by which patients receive treatment via teleconferencing on the internet. Teletherapy is one important subset of Telehealth, allowing those in therapy to continue treatment when they are unable to reach their therapist’s office.
Evolve Healthcare Services offers Teletherapy for patients who are receiving CBT. You can then access your session at your scheduled time and get all the benefits you would normally have from your CBT session. Contact us today to schedule your first teletherapy session.
Do you have consistent patterns of negative thinking about yourself and your life? Do these thoughts prevent you from enjoying life to its fullest? Then CBT may be an effective intervention for you.
This negative thinking is not the truth; it is the result of a mental health disorder. Contact us to see how CBT can help you with negative thinking.
Originally developed to treat depression, CBT is now used to address a wide range of mood disorders. Psychotherapists adjust the technique depending on the nature of a patient’s mental health problems, incorporating everything from deep breathing to journaling.
The following are some of the mental health disorders that can be addressed with CBT. If you are interested in pursuing CBT for one of these issues, contact us to consult with a mental health professional.
Decades after the first applications of CBT to treat depression, CBT continues to help those with this mental health disorder. Analysis of CBT has shown that it can be as effective as antidepressants in ameliorating the symptoms of depression. It can also prevent patients from experiencing relapses. CBT has been demonstrated as effective in treating bipolar disorder, as well.
Not every parent wants to turn to medication when their child receives a diagnosis of ADHD. CBT can serve as a viable alternative. While research is still evolving, CBT is a promising treatment for children and teens with ADHD.
CBT is also effective in addressing a range of anxiety issues, including panic attacks, GAD, and phobias. Some mental health professionals view CBT as the gold standard, in fact, when it comes to treating anxiety.
Traumatic events can lead to PTSD, mood disorders, or extreme grief in some patients. CBT has been shown to help these patients, as well. CBT helps patients repattern their thinking around traumatic events, and it can be helpful in treating victims of emotional, physical, or sexual abuse. Research so far in this field suggests that CBT may be the most effective intervention for patients with disorders related to trauma.
OCD, or Obessive Compulsive Disorder, is characterized by fixated and automatic thinking. As such, CBT is a natural fit for treating this disorder. Mental health professionals often combine CBT with exposure therapy to help those with OCD.
Many people lose countless hours of sleep due to obsessive thinking. For this reason, CBT can be a good option for those dealing with insomnia. While it is not an immediate solution for those with insomnia, it does help patients develop long-term tools to deal with disordered sleep. Sleep aids can help in the short term as patients learn to incorporate CBT techniques into their lives.
Cognitive behavioral therapy has evolved to include a number of different techniques. Each technique may be more or less effective with certain disorders and more or less transformative for each patient. The best approach is for patients and therapists to work together to see what techniques provide the most benefits to a situation. The following are just some of the techniques patients may learn in CBT:
Patients need to learn to recognize their distorted thinking so that they can address it and neutralize it. Distorted thinking is thinking that serves as an outsized response to an event. For example, a person with distorted thinking might have a brief conflict with a stranger and then think that they are universally disliked by everyone they know. Therapists can help patients identify these thought patterns and develop coping mechanisms.
When you begin to recognize negative thinking, you begin practicing better self care. Patients learn to treat themselves as kindly as they would treat a friend or even a stranger.
A good way to combat negative thinking is to write down positive thoughts. Maintaining a journal or daily log of positive self talk and ideas is an effective way to do this.
Patients with anxieties or phobias often benefit from slow and systematic exposure to their triggers. This process shows them that their fears are irrational and not based in reality. This technique requires the careful help and guidance of a mental health professional.
Just as writing down positive thoughts fights back against negative ones, practicing gratitude helps patients maintain a more positive outlook on the world. Patients can make it a habit to note things that they are grateful for throughout the day or acknowledge positive things every time they enter a new space.
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