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Psychotherapy in Little Rock, Arkansas

Compare 3 Psychotherapy clinics in Little Rock, Arkansas that offer care for depression, anxiety, and trauma. Review services, ratings, and contact details to find the right provider near you.
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Clinics

3 clinics shown

  • Alleviant Integrated Mental Health - Little Rock

    Alleviant Integrated Mental Health operates a psychiatric practice on Huron Lane in Little Rock, providing outpatient mental health services for adults. The clinic's listing indicates general psychiatry offerings, though specific procedural treatments like TMS or esketamine are not detailed in available data. Patients seeking information about treatment-resistant depression protocols or specialized interventions should contact the practice directly to confirm current service availability and insurance acceptance.

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  • Psychiatry Arkansas

    Psychiatry Arkansas operates an outpatient practice on North Rodney Parham Road in Little Rock, providing psychiatric evaluations and medication management for adults. The clinic's treatment offerings beyond standard psychiatric care are not specified in available listings. Patients seeking TMS, esketamine, or ketamine therapy should contact the practice directly to confirm whether these procedural treatments are available at this location.

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  • RiverStone Wellness Center

    RiverStone Wellness Center operates a multidisciplinary outpatient practice in Little Rock's Forest Place area, providing counseling, psychological services, and eating disorder treatment. The center employs dietitians, EMDR-trained therapists, and marriage counselors alongside general mental health clinicians. Services focus on individual therapy, relationship counseling, and specialized eating disorder protocols, though specific procedural treatments like TMS or ketamine are not listed among current offerings.

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About Psychotherapy

Psychotherapy — also called talk therapy — is treatment provided by a licensed clinician through structured conversation. It's used for depression, anxiety, trauma, relationship issues, life transitions, grief, and a wide range of other mental health concerns. Most patients in psychotherapy don't need medication; for those who do, talk therapy and medication are typically more effective combined than either alone.

Sessions usually run 45 to 60 minutes, weekly to start, with frequency adjusted based on need. Modalities vary widely — cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), psychodynamic therapy, dialectical behavior therapy (DBT), acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT), and many others — and a good therapist will tailor approach to the patient and concern. Initial sessions focus on understanding history and goals; ongoing work depends on the modality and what's surfacing.

Insurance coverage for psychotherapy is broad. Most commercial plans, Medicare, and Medicaid cover sessions with in-network providers; many therapists also offer sliding-scale fees or out-of-network superbills. Telehealth therapy is widely available and clinically equivalent to in-person care for most conditions.

Clinics in our directory include solo private practices, group practices, and integrated mental health centers offering therapy alongside psychiatric care.