ADHD

An ADHD assessment is a structured evaluation that combines clinical interviews, standardized rating scales, behavioral observations, and history-gathering from multiple sources (patient, family, school or work) to determine whether attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder is present, how it affects daily functioning, and whether other conditions or life stressors might be contributing to symptoms; it may include neuropsychological testing or medical screening when needed, and the outcome is a personalized report with diagnosis (if applicable), treatment recommendations—such as behavioral strategies, therapy, medication options, and accommodations—and a follow-up plan to monitor progress and adjust interventions over time.

Psychological Assessment and Testing

Drug and Alcohol

Drug and alcohol testing helps keep workplaces, schools, and clinics safe and compliant. It screens urine, saliva, blood, hair, or breath for illegal drugs, prescriptions, or alcohol. Rapid immunoassays screen initially; GC‑MS or LC‑MS/MS confirm and cut false positives.

Programs include pre-employment, random, post-incident, reasonable suspicion, and return-to-duty. Effective programs use clear policies, informed consent, chain-of-custody, and confidentiality. Positive results require MRO review, confirmatory tests, and appeal options.

Testing can link people to treatment and fit into broader wellness plans (education, EAPs, CBT, medication-assisted treatment). To be effective and fair, programs should be transparent, nonpunitive when focused on rehabilitation, culturally sensitive, and regularly updated for legal and scientific changes.

Disability

Disability assessment: a practical, person-centered check-in that untangles how an injury, illness, or mental health condition affects daily life and work. Think of it as a collaborative map-making session — we gather medical history, functional abilities, psychological and social factors, and real-life activities to pinpoint barriers and supports. The result is a clear, evidence-based picture used for treatment planning, workplace accommodations, return-to-work decisions, and disability determinations. Assessments are respectful, thorough, and recovery-focused — designed to highlight strengths, identify needs, and create actionable recommendations so people can move forward with dignity and purpose.

Parenting

Parenting Assessment

Wondering what’s working and what’s causing the midnight “whyyy” face? Our Parenting Assessment gives a clear, kind snapshot of your strengths, parenting style, and a few small changes that can help a lot. Through observation, structured interviews, and proven tools, our clinicians look at family interactions, child development, discipline, and stressors that affect parenting.

You’ll get:

  • A short, plain report showing strengths and practical next steps

  • Tailored tips for parenting skills, communication, and behavior support

  • Referrals or a plan for therapy, skills groups, or community resources if needed

Great for caregivers dealing with co-parenting, behavior issues, school worries, or anyone wanting more confidence and clarity. We mix clinical know-how with real-life practicality — parenting is part science, part chaos, and always worth supporting.