Treatment areas · 09 of 09

Men's Health & Mental Health

Mental-health care that takes the unique stress patterns men face seriously. Men are statistically less likely to seek help, and the help they do find is often shaped to a different shape of patient. We make space for the specifics: work stress, relational stress, and the particular shame around asking for help in the first place.

Who this is for

Common reasons patients come in.

  • 01

    Cis and trans men of any orientation

  • 02

    Gay, bi, and queer men navigating community-specific stressors

  • 03

    Trans men in or after transition

  • 04

    Men carrying first-time-in-care stigma about psychiatric help

  • 05

    Fathers, partners, and men in caregiving roles dealing with hidden depression

  • 06

    Men dealing with sexual health concerns (including HIV and PrEP-related anxiety) tangled with mental health

In practice

What treatment actually looks like.

No mystery, no choreography. Here’s the structure.

  1. 01

    Direct conversation. We don't soften the medical questions to make you comfortable

  2. 02

    Thorough history including substance use, sexual health, work stress, and relationships

  3. 03

    Medication management that takes side-effect profiles (especially sexual side effects) seriously

  4. 04

    Coordination with primary care for testosterone-related concerns when relevant

  5. 05

    Honest about what therapy is for, what medication is for, and where the line is

For LGBTQIA+ patients

Specifically, what affirming care looks like for men's health & mental health.

Gay, bi, queer, and trans men face specific stress patterns that don't fit a generic men's-mental-health template. Body image and fitness culture in gay communities, the gay loneliness epidemic that's been documented for over a decade, partner-of-record questions for HIV-positive men, the intersection of sexual health and mental health, family-building decisions and the grief that can come with them, and masculinity questions that go differently when masculinity itself was never a given. For trans men, the post-transition mental-health picture is its own thing. Testosterone changes affect mood, anger regulation, and sleep in real ways, and we plan around that. We also know that asking for help is harder for men generally, and harder still for queer and trans men specifically.

Common questions

What patients actually ask.

Self-pay rates

Intake $350. Med management $175. Ketamine inquire-within.

Some major insurance, credit cards, HSA and FSA accepted. Limited sliding-scale spots. Call or text 740-777-6184 with insurance questions.

Related treatment areas

What else often comes with this.

Ready when you are

One first conversation. We’ll take it from there.