Services we offer.
Therapy, psychiatry, medication management, and TMS — in person at our Eatontown office and via telehealth across all of New Jersey. Every service is delivered by NJ-licensed clinicians and reviewed regularly to keep our clinical content current.
We accept Medicaid (NJ FamilyCare), all 5 NJ FamilyCare MCOs, Medicare, Tricare, and most major commercial plans — 15+ plans in total. Most new patients are seen within 7-14 days.
- Therapy
Talk therapy with licensed clinicians for anxiety, depression, ADHD, trauma, and more. NJ FamilyCare and most insurance accepted.
Learn more - Psychiatry
Psychiatric evaluation and medication management for depression, anxiety, bipolar, ADHD, OCD. Telehealth across NJ. NJ FamilyCare and most insurance accepted.
Learn more - Medication Management
Ongoing prescription monitoring and adjustment by psychiatry providers. 30-minute visits every 4-12 weeks. Telehealth available across NJ.
Learn more - SpecialtyTMS Therapy
FDA-approved TMS for treatment-resistant depression and OCD. 5 days/week for 4-6 weeks. Most insurance covers TMS with prior auth (we handle it).
Learn more - Telehealth in New Jersey
Secure video therapy and psychiatry across all of New Jersey. Same rate as in-person, covered by NJ FamilyCare and most insurance. Most concerns work well by telehealth.
Learn more
Therapy, psychiatry, medication — what’s the difference?
Therapy is talking with a licensed clinician (an LCSW, LPC, psychologist, or marriage and family therapist) about what’s bringing you in, what you’ve tried, and what to do differently. We use evidence-based approaches — CBT, DBT, EMDR, IFS, and others — matched to what you’re working on.
Psychiatry is medical care for mental health, delivered by a psychiatrist or advanced-practice nurse who can diagnose, prescribe, and adjust medication. The first psychiatric visit is a 60- to 90-minute evaluation; follow-ups are shorter.
Medication management is the ongoing follow-up after the initial psychiatric evaluation — checking how your medication is working, adjusting as needed, and monitoring for side effects.
TMS (transcranial magnetic stimulation) is FDA-cleared non-medication treatment for treatment-resistant depression and OCD — in person at Eatontown only. Most patients who try TMS have already tried two or more medications without enough relief.
Many patients use more than one service at the same time — therapy plus medication is the most common combination. If you’re not sure where to start, our intake team will sort it out with you on the first call.
What to expect on your first visit.
Bring your insurance card, a photo ID, and a list of any medications you’re taking (with doses). For psychiatry, also bring any prior psychiatric records and a list of medications you’ve tried before. The first visit is a 60- to 90-minute evaluation. Bring a partner, family member, or friend if you’d like — many people do. By the end, you and your clinician will have a working plan: how often you’ll meet, what kind of treatment, and whether medication is something to consider.
We bill your insurance as a specialist, not as a facility. You’ll see a written estimate before your first visit. No surprise invoices six months later.
Before you book.
Will my insurance cover therapy or psychiatry?
For most patients, yes. We accept Medicaid (NJ FamilyCare), Medicare, Tricare, and most major commercial plans. Use the lookup card on the homepage or call us; we verify your benefits within one business day.
Can my whole family be seen here?
Yes — we see adults, teens, and children. Couples and family therapy are offered as part of our therapy service. If you and your partner or child want to be seen by the same clinician or by clinicians who coordinate, our intake team will set that up.
Do you prescribe controlled medications?
Yes, when clinically indicated and per state regulations. Our psychiatry team follows New Jersey controlled- substance rules and reviews each prescription on a visit-by-visit basis.
Is telehealth as effective as in-person care?
For most therapy and medication-management visits, the research finds telehealth and in-person care produce comparable results. Some specialty services — like TMS and certain trauma-focused protocols — remain in person. Your clinician will tell you when in-person is clinically the better call.
See more on the FAQ hub, or check accepted insurance plans.