A child or adolescent presenting with anxiety, attention difficulties, mood changes, or behavioral concerns is a different clinical picture than an adult with similar surface symptoms. Development, school, peer relationships, family dynamics, and identity all shape what we see and what we do.
Our work with young people balances several things at once: clinical assessment, respect for the young person’s growing autonomy, appropriate family involvement, and practical coordination with school, pediatrician, and any therapist already involved.
We move carefully. Adolescents in particular often have a finely tuned sense of when an adult is listening and when they are being managed. We aim for the first.
The young person you bring in today is changing every month. We hold that lightly.
For younger children, yes. For adolescents, we usually include parents for part of the session and meet with the young person separately for part of it. The exact balance depends on age and circumstances.
Carefully. We talk openly with the young person about what stays between us and what we will share with parents. Safety concerns are always shared. Day-to-day conversations are not.
When appropriate, yes, and conservatively. We start lower, monitor closely, and never medicate as a first response when other options are available.
With written consent, yes. We can write letters for accommodations, communicate with school counselors, and align on shared goals where helpful.
Begin your journey toward holistic mental wellness with a confidential consultation. We accept most major insurance plans and offer telehealth visits across Pennsylvania.