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News and Research
Science-backed Information for Better Care
ScienceWorks is a modern telepsychology practice offering evidence-based care for: Autism & ADHD, Anxiety & Depression, OCD, Trauma, Insomnia, Kids & Families, and more.
These conditions frequently co-occur, can be difficult to diagnose, and also difficult to treat - often requiring specialist knowledge and direct clinical experience to achieve the best possible outcomes.
That's why research and training are the foundation of our work.
Our goal is sharing our knowledge with our friends, clients, and partners to build a stronger, more informed mental health community.
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Moral OCD Therapy or “Being a Bad Person”? How Treatment Helps Untangle the Difference
Last reviewed: 03/19/2026 Reviewed by: Dr. Kiesa Kelly If you are looking into moral OCD therapy, you may already know the loop: an intrusive thought shows up, guilt hits hard, and then your mind starts demanding proof that you are still a good person. In moral OCD, sometimes called moral scrupulosity, the doubts focus on whether you are harmful, dishonest, irresponsible, selfish, or secretly immoral. [1][3][4] You may confess, replay conversations, review your intentions, or

Ryan Burns
4 days ago8 min read


ERP or I-CBT for OCD: How to Choose a Starting Point for OCD Therapy
Last reviewed: 03/11/2026 Reviewed by: Dr. Kiesa Kelly If you’re stuck researching ERP or I-CBT for OCD , you’re not alone. For many people, the “Which treatment is best?” question starts to feel urgent, high-stakes, and impossible to answer with certainty. In this article, you’ll learn: What ERP and I-CBT are actually trying to change Signs each approach may be a better starting fit for your OCD pattern When combining ERP vs I-CBT can be the most practical option Questions t

Ryan Burns
Mar 118 min read


High Y-BOCS Score? Understanding Y-BOCS score meaning, next steps, and when to seek specialized OCD therapy
Last reviewed: 03/11/2026 Reviewed by: Dr. Kiesa Kelly A high number on the Y-BOCS can feel alarming. If you’re searching for y-bocs score meaning, you probably want clarity about severity and a path to help, without getting pulled into more reassurance-seeking. In this article, you’ll learn: What the Y-BOCS measures (and what it doesn’t) How score ranges are typically interpreted When it’s time for OCD-specialized care What treatment planning can look like after a high score

Ryan Burns
Mar 116 min read


Online OCD Therapy in Tennessee: Does Telehealth ERP Actually Work?
Last reviewed: 03/11/2026 Reviewed by: Dr. Kiesa Kelly If you’re searching for online OCD therapy in Tennessee , you might be wondering a very practical question: can exposure and response prevention (ERP) really happen over video, and does it actually help? For many people, yes, when telehealth is structured well and you’re working with a licensed OCD therapist in Tennessee who has OCD-specific training. Research on remotely delivered CBT for OCD (including video, phone, and

Ryan Burns
Mar 117 min read


I Keep Researching My Symptoms but Still Feel Stuck: When It’s Time to Move From Self-Education to Therapy
Last reviewed: 03/10/2026 Reviewed by: Dr. Kiesa Kelly If you’ve been asking yourself when to start therapy , you’re not alone. For a lot of thoughtful, motivated people, learning about mental health becomes a form of self-care at first, and then slowly turns into hours of searching, second-guessing, and trying to “figure it out” before you’re allowed to get help. In this article, you’ll learn: Why self-education can be helpful and also quietly exhausting Signs your research

Ryan Burns
Mar 108 min read


When “My Brain Won’t Turn Off at Night” Needs Therapy, Not More Sleep Tips
Last reviewed: 03/10/2026 Reviewed by: Dr. Kiesa Kelly If your brain won’t turn off at night , it can feel like your body is begging for sleep while your mind keeps running a full-length documentary. You may tell yourself it’s “just stress,” Google more sleep tips, and try harder, but the more you chase sleep, the more awake you feel. 🧠 Key takeaway: If you can’t turn your brain off at night, it’s often a pattern your nervous system learned, not a personal failure. In this

Ryan Burns
Mar 108 min read


Can Therapy Help if I’m Not Sure Whether It’s ADHD, Autism, OCD, or Trauma? Therapy for Overlapping Symptoms
Last reviewed: 03/10/2026 Reviewed by: Dr. Kiesa Kelly If you’ve been cycling through possibilities like ADHD, autism, OCD, and trauma, you’re not alone. Many struggles show up as the same “surface symptoms,” which is why therapy for overlapping symptoms can help even when you’re not ready to claim one label. In this article, you’ll learn: Why overlapping symptoms are so confusing Common patterns people mix up (and what clinicians listen for) What therapy can do before you ha

Ryan Burns
Mar 107 min read


Do I Need Specialized Therapy or General Counseling? How to Tell the Difference
Last reviewed: 03/10/2026 Reviewed by: Dr. Kiesa Kelly If you’re trying to decide between specialized therapy and general counseling, you’re not alone. Many people start with “therapy” as a broad idea, then realize they need something more specific, like treatment that targets OCD loops, insomnia, trauma responses, or executive function struggles. In this article, you’ll learn: What people usually mean by “general counseling” (and when it helps) What makes therapy “specialize

Ryan Burns
Mar 109 min read


CBT-I vs Sleep Hygiene: When Insomnia Needs Specialized Treatment for Insomnia
Last reviewed: 03/09/2026 Reviewed by: Dr. Kiesa Kelly If you’ve been Googling “treatment for insomnia” at 2:00 a.m., you’ve probably seen the same advice: cut caffeine, get off screens, keep your bedroom cool. Those are useful sleep hygiene habits. But for many people, insomnia is not a “bad routine” problem. It’s a stuck pattern in the brain and body that often needs an evidence-based plan like cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I). [1][2] In this article, you’l

Ryan Burns
Mar 96 min read


How to Choose an OCD Therapist: ERP, I-CBT, and Questions to Ask Before You Start
Last reviewed: 03/09/2026 Reviewed by: Dr. Kiesa Kelly If you’re searching for an OCD therapist , you’re likely hoping for one thing: relief that actually lasts. OCD is highly treatable when therapy is OCD-specific and skills-based, not just supportive conversation. Evidence-based guidelines consistently recommend CBT approaches that include exposure and response prevention (ERP), and medication may also be part of care for some people. [1,2] In this article, you’ll learn: Ho

Ryan Burns
Mar 97 min read


What Type of Therapy Do I Need? A Decision Guide for OCD, ADHD, Autism, Insomnia, and Trauma
Last reviewed: 03/09/2026 Reviewed by: Dr. Kiesa Kelly Searching “type of therapy” can feel like walking into a hardware store without a project. The problem is not you. The word therapy covers very different tools, and the best fit depends on the pattern underneath your symptoms: obsessive doubt, executive-function overload, trauma-driven threat responses, or a sleep system that’s learned the wrong rhythm. In this article, you’ll learn: How to match symptoms to an evidence-

Ryan Burns
Mar 97 min read


Why Moral OCD Can Feel Like a Moral Problem (But Isn’t)
Last reviewed: 03/04/2026 Reviewed by: Dr. Kiesa Kelly Moral OCD can turn ordinary doubts into a gut-level fear: “What if I’m a bad person?” If you live with moral OCD , the distress often isn’t only about what might happen but about what it might mean about you. That’s why it can feel like a moral emergency instead of “just anxiety.” In this article, you’ll learn: Why OCD morality intrusive thoughts feel so personal How guilt and hyper-responsibility keep the loop going What

Ryan Burns
Mar 57 min read


Why OCD Feels So Real: Understanding OCD What If Thoughts and the “What If” Trap
Last reviewed: 03/03/2026 Reviewed by: Dr. Kiesa Kelly If you live with OCD what if thoughts , you already know this isn’t “just worrying.” A single doubt can land in your mind like an emergency alert: What if I hurt someone? What if I’m lying to myself? What if I missed something important? And the more you try to reason it away, the more real and convincing it can feel. In this article, you’ll learn: Why OCD often begins with doubt and uncertainty (not certainty) Why your

Ryan Burns
Mar 38 min read


How Long Does OCD Treatment Take? What to Expect from ERP
Last reviewed: 03/02/2026 Reviewed by: Dr. Kiesa Kelly If you’re searching “how long does OCD treatment take,” you’re probably hoping for a clear finish line. ERP (Exposure and Response Prevention) is a first-line, evidence-based therapy for OCD, but the timeline depends on a few predictable factors like severity, co-occurring symptoms, and how consistently you can practice between sessions. [3,4] In this article, you’ll learn: Why there’s no single ERP timeline (and what act

Ryan Burns
Mar 27 min read


Insomnia Screener Results + “ADHD Symptoms”: Why Insomnia Treatment Sometimes Comes First
Last reviewed: 02/27/2026 Reviewed by: Dr. Kiesa Kelly If your insomnia screener results were high and you’re also thinking, “Do I have ADHD?”, you’re not alone. In real life, insomnia treatment sometimes comes before (or alongside) ADHD assessment because sleep loss can create a very convincing “ADHD-like” picture. In this article, you’ll learn: Why sleep loss can look like ADHD (especially with executive function) Clues that insomnia is driving the symptoms right now When A

Ryan Burns
Feb 277 min read


PHQ-9 scoring in midlife: Depression, neurodivergent burnout, or both?
Last reviewed: 02/27/2026 Reviewed by: Dr. Kiesa Kelly If you’ve been staring at a questionnaire total and wondering what it actually means, you’re not alone. In midlife, phq 9 scoring can reflect depression, but it can also capture chronic stress, hormone-driven sleep disruption, or neurodivergent burnout that looks a lot like “low mood.” In this article, you’ll learn: What the PHQ-9 measures (and what it doesn’t) A simple PHQ-9 score interpretation (including common cutoffs

Kiesa Kelly
Feb 277 min read


Why Clinicians Use Multiple Adult ADHD Screening Tools in ADHD/Autism Evaluations (and What Each One Adds)
Last reviewed: 02/27/2026 Reviewed by: Dr. Kiesa Kelly If you’ve ever taken an online quiz and wondered, “So… do I have ADHD or autism?”, you’re not alone. Adult ADHD screening tools can be helpful, but a single score rarely tells the full story. That’s why quality evaluations typically include more than one questionnaire: clinicians are looking for a consistent pattern across attention, mood, sleep, anxiety, sensory load, and life history. In this article, you’ll learn: Why

Kiesa Kelly
Feb 277 min read


After a Positive AQ-10: What an Adult Autism Assessment Near Me Actually Looks Like
Last reviewed: 02/27/2026 Reviewed by: Dr. Kiesa Kelly If you just had a positive AQ-10 and you’re searching “adult autism assessment near me,” a big question usually follows: What happens next? A screening score can point you toward a full evaluation, but it can’t explain your full profile on its own. [1] In this article, you’ll learn: What an adult autism assessment is trying to answer (beyond “yes/no”) Typical steps in an autism evaluation for adults, including interview

Ryan Burns
Feb 276 min read


AQ 10 Autism Screener (AQ-10): How to Read Results as a High-Masking Woman
Last reviewed: 02/27/2026 Reviewed by: Dr. Kiesa Kelly If you’re a high-masking woman who took the AQ 10 and got a “surprisingly low” score (or a score that feels ambiguous), it can stir up a lot: relief, doubt, grief, validation, or a looping “But what does this actually mean?” The AQ-10 test is a quick autism screener, not a diagnosis. In real life, especially for women who’ve spent decades “passing,” the most important information isn’t just the number. It’s the lifelong p

Kiesa Kelly
Feb 278 min read


ASRS Part A vs Part B: ASRS v1 1 score interpretation when results split
Last reviewed: 02/27/2026 Reviewed by: Dr. Kiesa Kelly If you’ve ever searched “asrs v1 1 score interpretation” and felt more confused afterward, you’re not alone. One of the most common questions we hear is: “Why did I ‘pass’ Part B but not Part A?” The short answer is that the ASRS is not a pass/fail test, and Part A is designed as a quick screener rather than a full diagnostic score. [1–3] In this article, you’ll learn: What Part A and Part B are measuring Why different AD

Kiesa Kelly
Feb 277 min read
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