Child, Adolescent, and Adult Psychiatry Services
Psychiatry can help patients and families understand mental health symptoms, diagnosis questions, medication options, and ongoing treatment needs. Children, teens, and adults may seek care for different reasons, but the goal is the same: to create a safer, clearer path toward support.
Brain Health USA provides psychiatric services for patients seeking evaluation, treatment planning, medication management, and follow-up care. Support may be available for concerns such as ADHD, anxiety, depression, mood symptoms, sleep problems, trauma-related stress, and behavior changes.
Insurance verification available | Telehealth or in-person options where available | Serving eligible service areas
Who Psychiatry Services May Help
Psychiatry may be helpful when symptoms affect daily life, school, work, relationships, sleep, safety, or emotional stability. Some patients seek a first evaluation, while others already have a diagnosis and need continued care or a medication review.
- Children or teens with attention, mood, anxiety, behavior, or school-related concerns
- Adults experiencing depression, anxiety, sleep problems, trauma, mood changes, or stress
- Patients who need medication management or psychiatric follow-up
- Families seeking guidance about symptoms, care options, and next steps
- Patients who may benefit from therapy support, psychiatry, or coordinated care
Psychiatry should be individualized. A child’s care may look very different from an adult’s care, and a teen’s needs may differ from both. The provider should consider age, symptoms, development, family context, safety, and treatment history.
Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Support
Children and teens may need support for anxiety disorders, ADHD, depression, irritability, sleep problems, school stress, family stress, trauma, or behavior concerns. Care often includes gathering information from the patient and caregiver, reviewing symptoms over time, and discussing what has changed at home, school, or in social settings.
When medication is considered for a child or teen, the provider should discuss the risks, benefits, monitoring, and follow-up with appropriate caregiver involvement. Therapy, school support, routines, and family guidance may also be part of the broader care plan.
Adult Psychiatry Support
Adults may seek psychiatry because symptoms affect work, relationships, parenting, sleep, energy, or daily functioning. Some patients seek care after years of trying to manage symptoms on their own. Others need support during a stressful life change, grief, burnout, or worsening anxiety or depression.
Adult psychiatric care may include diagnostic evaluation, medication management, therapy coordination, and follow-up. Patients may also discuss psychotherapy and counseling, online psychiatry, or support for related concerns such as insomnia, substance use, or mood instability.
Psychiatric care should not feel rushed or confusing. Patients and families should understand what is being recommended, why it is being recommended, and what follow-up may be needed.
Evaluation and Treatment Approach
A psychiatric evaluation may include questions about symptoms, medical history, medications, sleep, family history, safety, school or work functioning, prior treatment, and patient goals. For children and teens, caregivers may also be asked about developmental history, behavior patterns, and school concerns.
Treatment may include medication management, therapy support, lifestyle recommendations, safety planning, and regular follow-up. Recommendations should be based on the patient’s clinical needs and adjusted as symptoms change.
How Psychiatry Differs by Age
Children, teens, and adults often need different types of psychiatric support. A child’s appointment may involve caregiver input, school concerns, developmental history, sleep, behavior, and family routines. A teen may need space to discuss mood, anxiety, attention, identity stress, social pressure, and safety. Adults may focus on work, relationships, parenting, sleep, medications, and long-term mental health patterns.
Because needs differ by age, care should be adapted to the patient. A provider should consider the patient’s stage of life, support system, symptoms, and goals before recommending treatment.
Medication Review and Ongoing Monitoring
Medication management, when appropriate, should include a clear discussion of why a medication is being considered, the expected benefits, possible side effects, and when follow-up is needed. For children and teens, caregiver involvement and monitoring are especially important.
Psychiatric care may also involve therapy coordination, school or family support, safety planning, and changes to the care plan over time. Patients and families should feel comfortable asking questions before starting or changing treatment.
Preparing for the First Psychiatry Appointment
Before the first appointment, patients or caregivers can gather a list of current medications, previous treatment, primary symptoms, sleep patterns, school or work concerns, and any urgent safety issues. For children and teens, it may also help to note changes in grades, behavior, friendships, appetite, routines, or family stress.
Adults may want to write down when symptoms began, what makes them better or worse, and whether symptoms have affected work, relationships, parenting, or daily responsibilities. Clear information helps the provider make the visit more useful and focused.
Insurance and Appointment Options
Brain Health USA can help patients verify insurance benefits before care begins. Coverage can vary by plan, provider, location, eligibility, and service type, so patients should confirm their benefits before scheduling or beginning treatment.
Patients can call (877) 515-8113 or use the online booking option to ask about appointment availability, including telehealth and in-person options where available, and discuss the next steps.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do you provide child psychiatry?
Yes. Brain Health USA provides psychiatric support for children and adolescents. Care may include evaluation, diagnosis, medication management when appropriate, follow-up care, and coordination with caregivers, schools, and other providers based on the patient’s needs.
Do you provide adult psychiatry?
Yes. Brain Health USA provides psychiatric services for adults experiencing concerns such as anxiety, depression, ADHD, mood disorders, trauma-related symptoms, sleep problems, and other mental health conditions. Care is individualized based on each patient’s symptoms, goals, and treatment needs.
Can a psychiatrist help with ADHD, anxiety, or depression?
Yes. Psychiatrists can evaluate symptoms of ADHD, anxiety, depression, and other mental health concerns. Following a comprehensive evaluation, the provider may recommend medication management, therapy coordination, lifestyle recommendations, follow-up care, or a combination of treatment approaches.
How does medication management work?
Medication management begins with a psychiatric evaluation and discussion of symptoms, medical history, current medications, treatment goals, and safety considerations. When medication is appropriate, the provider explains the expected benefits, possible side effects, monitoring, and follow-up recommendations.
Can insurance be verified?
Yes. Brain Health USA can help patients verify insurance benefits before care begins and explain available appointment options based on their insurance coverage.
Reviewed Mental Health Information
This page was reviewed by the Brain Health USA Clinical Team to help patients understand available mental health services, appointment options, insurance verification, and when to seek professional care.
Reviewed by: Brain Health USA Clinical Team
Last updated: July 2026
Phone: (877) 515-8113
Appointments: Online booking is available for new and returning patients.
Insurance: Brain Health USA can help patients verify insurance benefits before care begins.
Emergency disclaimer: If you are experiencing a medical or mental health emergency, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room. If you are in emotional distress, call or text 988 for the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline.
Schedule Mental Health Support Today
Call (877) 515-8113 or book an appointment online to request mental health support from Brain Health USA. The team can help explain appointment options, insurance verification, and next steps for care.