ScienceWorksHealth | Specialized Therapy
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Comprehensive Therapy Services
Tailored to Your Mental Health Needs

Specialized therapy | Backed by science | Delivered with care

We're here to help!

With kindness and without judgement.

Available via telehealth in the following states:

AL, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, DE, DC, FL, GA, IA, ID, IL, IN, KS, KY, ME, MD, MI, MN, MS, MO, NE, NV, NH, NJ, NC, ND, OH, OK, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VA, WA, WV, WI, WY

Our Specialties

Last reviewed: 04/06/2026

Reviewed by: Dr. Kiesa Kelly

These conditions require specialist care because they can be difficult to diagnose; they can be difficult to treat; and they can definitely be difficult to live with. What's more, is they often occur together which adds to the challenge.

At ScienceWorks, we embrace that challenge because it's where we can have the greatest impact.

You can LIVE BETTER. Learn more about our scientific approach to providing care that is gentle, affirming, and effective.

Our Approach

Our style is not "one-size-fits-all". We build a structured clinical program that is comprehensive and evidence-based to leverage your strengths.

Step 2

Clinical Intake 

An accurate diagnosis is essential to receiving effective care.

Together, we'll establish a complete perspective.

Step 3

Treatment

We'll work together to build a personalized plan with clear goals and strategies.

What gets measured gets improved. By starting with the correct diagnosis and building a structured treatment plan, we can establish clear metrics to monitor your progress. We continually evaluate these results and adjust the treatment plan as needed to keep you on the right track

Measurement Based Care

Science. Works.

Our Services

ScienceWorks offers a suite of services designed to meet your needs and your budget. If you have questions, please Contact Us!

At ScienceWorks, treatment for ADHD is adaptive by design: we start by looking for real-world patterns (not just symptoms) in attention, motivation, overwhelm, sleep, and environment - then we'll work together to a build a flexible plan that fits your actual life. 

That might include practical supports to reduce friction and strengthen follow-through, skills work for anxiety, perfectionism, and shame, and a whole-person lens when ADHD overlaps with commonly co-occurring conditions such as trauma, OCD, depression, burnout. 

Most importantly, we iterate - tracking what helps, what collapses under stress, and why - so strategies get refined instead of judged, and the plan evolves into a realistic set of strategies that work with compassion during good times and bad.

At ScienceWorks, autism-focused care starts with your personal experience - not a one-size-fits-all checklist. We pay attention to where your mind and your nervous system get taxed: sensory input, social and communication demands, decision load, transitions, masking, and the push-crash cycle that can build over time.

Together, we translate those patterns into a plan that’s individualized and sustainable. That may look like building a sensory-smart environment, strengthening boundaries and self-advocacy, creating clearer routines that reduce decision fatigue, and developing tools for overload, shutdowns, or meltdowns.

We also keep the full picture in view when autism shows up alongside ADHD, trauma, OCD, depression, or burnout, so your treatment is seamless and effective. Our clinical team specializes in neurodivergence with care and lived experience. We notice what supports you, what drains you, and what breaks down under pressure. We'll work together to create an approach that fits you more and more over time so you can move forward with confidence.

Inference-Based CBT (I-CBT)

I-CBT is a research-backed therapy for OCD that helps you understand how OCD disrupts the reasoning process that gives rise to the OCD doubts from the start.

By learning how to resolve the inferential confusion in OCD, we learn to see compulsions as irrelevant.

Provided By

Kiesa

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Catherine

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Ryan

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Laura

Exposure-Response Prevention (ERP)

Justice-Based Exposure-Response Prevention is effective at breaking the obsessive-compulsive cycle and helping the brain to learn new responses to intrusive thoughts.

Our approach to ERP is values-based and affirming.

Provided By

Kiesa

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Catherine

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Ryan

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Laura

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Kathryn

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

CBT for anxiety is an evidence-based approach that helps you identify how catastrophic thinking and safety behaviors keep the anxiety cycle active

Through skill-building and support, CBT helps to retrain the brain with more resilience in the face of stress and more confidence in the face of uncertainty.

Provided By

Kiesa

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Catherine

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Ryan

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Laura

Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)

DBT helps you manage anxiety by building skills in emotion regulation, distress tolerance, and mindfulness.

Improve your self-confidence and your relationships by learning how to navigate intense feelings without impulsive reactions, reduce overwhelm, and respond to stress with greater steadiness and control.

Provided By

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Laura

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Kathryn

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)

ACT helps to change your relationship with anxiety by building psychological flexibility.

Instead of fighting anxious thoughts, you'll practice acceptance, clarify your values, and take meaningful steps forward -- even when anxiety shows up.

Provided By

Kiesa

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Catherine

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Laura

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Kathryn

Neurocounseling (NC)

Neurocounseling is a therapeutic approach that combines evidence-based treatment strategies with deeper neurological insights for anxiety.

With NC, you'll learn the science of how your brain works to gain new perspectives on your experiences and your therapy - allowing you to move forward with focus and clarity.

Provided By

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Ryan

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

CBT for depression helps you recognize how self-critical thoughts and behavioral withdrawal reinforce low mood.

By strengthening new thinking patterns and re-engaging in meaningful activity, CBT supports momentum, restores problem-solving capacity, and builds confidence even when energy and motivation feel limited.

Provided By

Kiesa

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Catherine

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Ryan

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Laura

Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)

DBT offers practical tools to help you navigate depression with greater balance and skill.

You'll strengthen emotion regulation, increase distress tolerance, and reduce shutdown patterns - building stability, improving relationships, and responding to stress with greater steadiness and self-trust.

Provided By

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Laura

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Kathryn

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)

ACT provides relief by shifting how you relate to depression.

Rather than getting stuck in self-judgment or waiting to “feel better,” you'll learn to make room for difficult emotions, reconnect with your values, and take steady steps toward a fuller life.

Provided By

Kiesa

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Catherine

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Laura

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Kathryn

Neurocounseling (NC)

Neurocounseling integrates evidence-based therapy with insights about how the brain processes mood, motivation, and stress.

By understanding the neurological patterns underlying depression, you can gain perspective on your experiences and develop targeted strategies to support clarity, focus, and forward movement.

Provided By

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Ryan

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

CBT is an evidence-based strategy that helps you recognize how past experiences distort your present thinking.

By identifying thought patterns that maintain distress, you'll learn practical skills to challenge these perceptions, process memories safely, and reclaim control over your reactions.

Provided By

Kiesa

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Catherine

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Ryan

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Laura

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)

ACT for trauma teaches you to meet difficult memories with purpose and compassion rather than avoidance.

By developing mindfulness skills and connecting with your core values, you'll learn to move beyond past experiences without letting them control your choices.

Provided By

Kiesa

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Catherine

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Laura

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Kathryn

Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR)

EMDR can be a preferable alternative to other therapies because EMDR requires minimal talking or discussion.

EMDR helps your brain naturally reprocess disturbing memories through guided bilateral stimulation in a controlled manner.

This transforms how memories are stored, reducing their emotional charge.

Provided By

Kiesa

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Kathryn

Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT)

If you've tried other therapies but still feel caught in the cycle of trauma, CPT is a specialized therapy that can help you regain your footing and accelerate your progress.

CPT uses a steady cadence of psychoeducation and guided restructuring to identify the "stuck points" holding you back. During the process you will develop focused strategies to overcome these barriers with clarity and efficiency.

Provided By

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Ryan

CBT for Insomnia (CBT-I)

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I) is a scientific framework for understanding and disrupting the patterns that keep you awake.

With a deeper understanding of these barriers, we can create individualized strategies and support systems to make sleep feel safe and attainable.

Provided By

Kiesa

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Ryan

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Laura

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Kathryn

Did you know...

CBT-I blends seamlessly with therapies for co-occurring conditions to provide lasting relief at the source.

The structured approach of CBT-I can also help you build positive routines around medications, CPAP devices, and more - making it an excellent foundation for healthy, sustainable sleep.

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Chronic Illness

CBT for Chronic Pain (CBT-CP)

CBT for chronic pain helps you understand how thought patterns, emotions, and behaviors influence the experience of pain.

By developing coping strategies and reducing unhelpful pain responses, CBT supports improved daily functioning, greater resilience, and a stronger sense of control over your life.

Provided By

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Laura

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)

ACT helps you navigate health challenges with psychological flexibility.

Rather than struggling against symptoms or uncertainty, you'll learn to make space for difficult experiences while continuing to move toward the activities and relationships that matter most.

Provided By

Kiesa

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Catherine

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Laura

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Kathryn

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Substance Use

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

CBT for substance use focuses on recognizing how stress, emotional triggers, and learned habits contribute to substance use.

By building coping skills and identifying high-risk situations, you will learn practical ways to interrupt cycles of use and strengthen healthier responses to stress.

Provided By

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Ryan

Motivational Interviewing (MI)

Motivational Interviewing helps you uncover your internal motivation to change substance use patterns.

Rather than being told what to do, you'll explore your values, resolve hesitation, and build momentum toward healthier and more sustainable choices.

Provided By

Kiesa

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Ryan

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Laura

Gottman Method (GM)

The Gottman Method helps to strengthen relationships by improving communication, trust, and emotional connection.

You and your partner will learn practical tools to manage conflict more effectively, deepen understanding of each other’s needs, and build a more stable and supportive partnership.

Provided By

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Ryan

A comprehensive approach to Couples Therapy will help both partners to:

  • Identify destructive patterns that create distance or escalate conflict

  • Build friendship and intimacy through shared meaning and understanding

  • Develop practical skills for healthy communication and conflict resolution

  • Strengthen emotional connection by turning toward each other instead of away

  • Create shared goals that honor your dreams and values

Family Therapy

Family therapy focuses on how relationships and communication patterns affect the entire household.

When conflict, stress, or life transitions disrupt family dynamics, therapy provides a supportive space to rebuild understanding, strengthen communication, and work toward a healthier, more stable environment.

Provided By

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Ryan

A comprehensive approach to Family Therapy may include:

  • Systems-based interventions that address how family patterns and roles affect everyone

  • Communication training to help family members express needs and listen effectively

  • Conflict resolution skills that transform arguments into opportunities for understanding

  • Boundary setting that respects individual needs while maintaining family cohesion

  • Collaborative problem-solving where all voices are heard and valued

Parent Management Training (PMT)

Parent Management Training (PMT) teaches parents practical strategies for managing challenging behaviors and supporting positive development.

By understanding what drives difficult behavior, parents learn effective tools to reduce conflict, strengthen boundaries, and encourage cooperation at home.

Provided By

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Ryan

A comprehensive approach to Parent Management Training may include:

  • Behavior analysis to understand what triggers and maintains challenging behaviors

  • Positive reinforcement strategies that encourage desired behaviors naturally

  • De-escalation techniques for managing tantrums and emotional outbursts

  • Communication skills that reduce power struggles and increase cooperation

  • Self-care strategies because effective parenting starts with taking care of yourself

Step 4

Monitor Progress

We use custom technology to collect self-reported data and measure treatment objectives.

Services
ADHD
Autism
OCD
Anxiety
Depression
Trauma
Insomnia
Chronic Illness
Substance Use
Couples
Families
Parents
Booking

Schedule your free consultation

Please submit the form below to schedule your free consultation.

Together, we'll learn about your experience, identify treatment objectives, and get you matched with the resources you need! 

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Current response time: <1 hour

Frequently Asked Questions

About Our Clinicians

ScienceWorks is a psychologist-led behavioral health practice offering specialized therapy for OCD, trauma, insomnia, ADHD, autism, anxiety, depression, chronic illness, and related concerns. Our clinicians bring different training backgrounds, treatment styles, and specialty areas, so we can help match you with care that fits your goals, symptoms, and preferences. If you are looking for OCD treatment, trauma therapy, CBT-I for insomnia, neurodivergence-affirming support, or help with overlapping concerns, our team is here to help.

 

Kiesa Kelly, PhD, HSP

Dr. Kiesa Kelly is the founder of ScienceWorks and a psychologist with training in clinical psychology and neuropsychology. She works with clients navigating OCD, trauma, insomnia, ADHD, autism, and co-occurring concerns, and her approach includes ERP, I-CBT, ACT, CBT, CBT-I, and EMDR. Dr. Kelly’s background reflects advanced training across medical and behavioral health settings, and her work is grounded in evidence-based, compassionate care.

 

Laura Travers Heinig, PhD

Dr. Laura Travers Heinig is a psychologist whose work focuses on the connection between physical health and mental health. She supports clients dealing with insomnia, chronic pain, trauma, ADHD and autism, anxiety, depression, OCD, and women’s health concerns. Her approach includes CBT-I, CBT for Chronic Pain, ACT for Chronic Pain, and motivational interviewing, with an emphasis on practical strategies that improve day-to-day functioning and quality of life.

 

Kathryn Wood, LPC-MHSP, LPCC

Kathryn Wood provides therapy for teens and adults coping with OCD, anxiety, trauma, ADHD, autism, and insomnia. Her work draws from ERP, ACT, DBT, IFS, CBT-I, and EMDR, and she brings a collaborative, supportive style that helps clients reduce avoidance, build skills, and make steady progress toward meaningful change.

 

Ryan F.P. Robertson, ALPC-MHSP, NCC

Ryan Robertson works with adults, teens, couples, and families. His areas of focus include OCD, anxiety, depression, ADHD, autism, insomnia, and substance use, and his treatment approach includes CBT, ERP, CPT, motivational interviewing, neurocounseling, and CBT-I. He helps clients better understand patterns that keep them stuck and build practical tools for moving forward.

 

Catherine Cavin, LMSW

Catherine Cavin provides therapy for clients working through OCD, anxiety, depression, ADHD, autism, and substance use concerns. Her approach includes ERP, I-CBT, ACT, CBT, somatic-based therapy, and emotion-focused therapy. She focuses on creating a supportive, goal-oriented space where clients can better understand themselves and develop lasting coping strategies.

 

Next Steps

Our team also maintains professional profiles and affiliations so you can learn more about each clinician’s background, areas of focus, and approach to care before reaching out.

 

Not sure where to start? Schedule a free consultation and we’ll talk through your goals, symptoms, therapy preferences, and next steps so you can connect with the clinician who makes the most sense for your situation.

About Our Treatment Strategies

At ScienceWorks, we do not use a one-size-fits-all model of therapy. We use evidence-based treatment strategies that can be matched to your diagnosis, symptoms, nervous-system patterns, daily demands, and long-term goals. Some people need a highly structured approach focused on one primary concern, such as OCD or insomnia. Others need a more integrated plan that addresses overlapping concerns such as ADHD and autism, trauma and OCD, anxiety and depression, or chronic illness and stress. Our goal is to choose treatment strategies that are clinically sound, practical in real life, and flexible enough to evolve as you make progress.

 

Many of our treatment plans combine more than one modality. That means therapy is not just about understanding what is wrong. It is about identifying what is keeping you stuck, building the right tools, and applying those tools in a way that fits your life. Below is an overview of the treatment approaches we use most often across our therapy services.

 

Inference-Based CBT (I-CBT)

Inference-Based CBT is a specialized treatment approach used most often for OCD. Instead of focusing only on compulsions or reassurance-seeking, I-CBT helps you understand how OCD begins earlier in the process - at the level of doubt, inference, and reasoning. In practice, this means learning how OCD pulls you away from what is actually happening and into a feared possibility that feels urgent, dangerous, or morally significant. By recognizing that shift, many people are better able to step out of the obsessional story before it takes over.

 

At ScienceWorks, I-CBT can be especially valuable for people who feel trapped in mental rituals, over-analysis, moral doubt, responsibility fears, or intrusive thoughts that do not always respond well to generic talk therapy. It is a thoughtful, structured, and often gentler way to reduce OCD’s grip by changing the reasoning process that keeps the cycle going.

 

Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP)

Exposure and Response Prevention is one of the best-known evidence-based treatments for OCD. ERP helps you gradually face the situations, thoughts, sensations, or uncertainties that trigger obsessive fear while reducing the compulsive behaviors that usually follow. Over time, this helps the brain learn that anxiety, uncertainty, and intrusive thoughts can be tolerated without relying on rituals, checking, reassurance, avoidance, or mental review.

 

At ScienceWorks, ERP is used in a way that is intentional, affirming, and collaborative. The goal is not to overwhelm you. The goal is to help you build new learning safely and effectively. ERP can be useful for contamination fears, harm OCD, relationship OCD, scrupulosity, sexual obsessions, health anxiety, “just right” experiences, and many other OCD presentations. It is often one of the most important strategies for breaking the obsessive-compulsive cycle and restoring freedom in daily life.

 

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy is a structured, practical treatment approach that helps you identify how patterns of thought, behavior, and emotional response interact. CBT is used across many concerns, including anxiety, depression, trauma-related symptoms, substance use, and adjustment difficulties. In therapy, CBT may involve noticing distorted thinking, reducing avoidance, testing feared predictions, changing self-defeating routines, and building more useful coping patterns.

 

At ScienceWorks, CBT is not used as a generic worksheet-driven process. We use it as a flexible foundation for helping people understand what is maintaining distress and what can be changed. CBT can be especially helpful when someone feels trapped in cycles of self-criticism, shutdown, catastrophic thinking, procrastination, or stress-driven habits. It is often combined with other strategies when the clinical picture is more complex or when a more specialized treatment is needed.

 

Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)

Dialectical Behavior Therapy is a skills-based treatment approach that helps people manage intense emotions, reduce overwhelm, and respond more effectively under stress. DBT is especially useful when anxiety, depression, emotional reactivity, relationship strain, or shutdown patterns make it difficult to stay grounded and act in line with your goals. Core DBT skill areas include emotion regulation, distress tolerance, mindfulness, and interpersonal effectiveness.

 

At ScienceWorks, DBT-informed work can be helpful for people who feel flooded easily, get stuck in all-or-nothing reactions, struggle to recover after conflict, or want more stability in relationships and daily functioning. DBT does not ask you to suppress emotion. It helps you build a steadier relationship with emotion so you can respond with more clarity, flexibility, and self-respect.

 

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy helps people change their relationship with distress rather than spending all their energy trying to eliminate every difficult thought, feeling, urge, or memory. ACT focuses on psychological flexibility: the ability to stay connected to the present moment, make room for difficult internal experiences, and keep moving toward what matters most. This can be especially helpful for anxiety, trauma-related avoidance, depression, chronic illness, OCD-adjacent distress, and neurodivergent burnout.

 

At ScienceWorks, ACT is often used when people feel stuck fighting their inner experience and losing connection with their values, identity, or long-term goals. ACT can help you step back from harsh internal narratives, reduce avoidance, and take meaningful action even when life feels uncertain, uncomfortable, or imperfect. It is often a strong fit for people who want therapy that is compassionate, practical, and grounded in values-based change.

 

Neurocounseling (NC)

Neurocounseling integrates evidence-based therapy with a clearer understanding of how the brain processes mood, stress, attention, motivation, and habit formation. For some clients, learning how the brain works makes therapy feel less moralized and more workable. Instead of viewing symptoms as personal failure, people can begin to understand how nervous-system activation, cognitive load, reinforcement, and stress physiology affect their experience.

 

At ScienceWorks, neurocounseling may be used to support treatment for anxiety, depression, ADHD-related challenges, or other concerns where understanding the underlying brain-behavior patterns can improve insight and follow-through. The aim is not to turn therapy into a lecture. It is to give you a more accurate framework for understanding your struggles so your treatment feels clearer, more targeted, and easier to apply in real life.

 

Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR)

EMDR is a trauma-focused therapy designed to help the brain reprocess distressing memories so they feel less emotionally overwhelming in the present. Many people come to EMDR when they feel like they understand what happened but their body, emotions, or reactions still respond as if the threat is current. EMDR uses a structured process and guided bilateral stimulation to help the nervous system process traumatic material in a different way.

 

At ScienceWorks, EMDR may be a strong fit for trauma, distressing memories, negative self-beliefs shaped by past experiences, or situations where talking in detail about trauma feels exhausting or inaccessible. The goal is not to force reliving. The goal is to reduce the emotional charge of what happened so you can feel more present, more stable, and less controlled by past experiences.

 

Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT)

Cognitive Processing Therapy is a structured trauma treatment that helps people identify and work through the “stuck points” that often develop after overwhelming or harmful experiences. These stuck points may show up as persistent beliefs about safety, trust, guilt, shame, control, or self-worth. CPT helps you examine those beliefs carefully, understand how they were shaped, and replace rigid trauma-driven conclusions with more accurate and workable perspectives.

 

At ScienceWorks, CPT can be useful for people who want a trauma approach that is organized, reflective, and focused on helping them regain their footing. It is especially helpful when trauma has changed the way you think about yourself, other people, or the world. CPT often supports meaningful progress when someone feels trapped in shame, blame, fear, or hypervigilance long after the original event has passed.

 

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I)

CBT-I is a specialized treatment for insomnia that targets the thoughts, behaviors, and physiological patterns that keep sleep problems going. It is not just sleep hygiene. CBT-I looks at the full sleep system: how worry about sleep builds, how compensatory habits form, how the bed can become linked with frustration or alertness, and how inconsistent routines can reinforce insomnia over time. Treatment may include sleep scheduling, stimulus control, behavioral experiments, and practical changes that make sleep feel safer and more attainable.

At ScienceWorks, CBT-I is especially valuable because insomnia often overlaps with OCD, trauma, anxiety, chronic illness, ADHD, and burnout. Treating sleep directly can improve functioning across the rest of the clinical picture. For many people, CBT-I becomes a foundation that supports better emotional regulation, clearer thinking, and more sustainable daily routines.

 

CBT for Chronic Pain (CBT-CP)

CBT for Chronic Pain helps people understand how pain is influenced not only by physical symptoms, but also by stress, attention, emotion, behavior, and learned nervous-system responses. This does not mean pain is “all in your head.” It means the experience of pain is shaped by many interacting systems, and treatment can help reduce suffering, improve coping, and support better functioning even when symptoms are persistent.

 

At ScienceWorks, CBT-CP may include helping you identify pain-amplifying patterns such as fear, overexertion-and-crash cycles, catastrophic thinking, withdrawal from meaningful activity, or stress-driven flare responses. The goal is to help you build steadier pacing, better self-awareness, and more effective coping strategies so life does not become organized entirely around pain.

 

Motivational Interviewing (MI)

Motivational Interviewing is a collaborative conversation style that helps people strengthen their own reasons for change. Instead of arguing, pushing, or prescribing from the outside, MI helps you clarify what matters to you, explore ambivalence honestly, and increase commitment to next steps that feel meaningful and realistic. It is often useful when someone feels torn, discouraged, resistant, or unsure about making a change.

 

At ScienceWorks, MI can be especially helpful in work related to substance use, treatment engagement, behavior change, and complex situations where insight alone has not been enough to create momentum. MI respects autonomy while still helping therapy move forward. It can be a powerful fit when you want support that feels collaborative rather than confrontational.

 

Gottman Method for Couples Therapy

The Gottman Method is a research-informed approach to couples therapy that focuses on improving communication, strengthening trust, reducing destructive conflict patterns, and rebuilding emotional connection. Rather than treating relationship stress as a vague compatibility problem, Gottman-informed work looks at how partners respond to each other under pressure, how repair attempts succeed or fail, and how patterns of criticism, defensiveness, shutdown, or disconnection affect the relationship over time.

 

At ScienceWorks, Gottman-informed couples therapy is designed to help partners understand each other more clearly, manage conflict with more skill, and create a relationship that feels more stable, respectful, and supportive. This approach can be useful for couples who feel distant, stuck in repetitive conflict, uncertain how to communicate effectively, or ready to rebuild trust and partnership with clearer structure.

 

Family Therapy

Family therapy focuses on the relational system rather than viewing one person in isolation as “the problem.” It looks at how communication patterns, roles, stress, transitions, conflict, and expectations affect the entire household. Family therapy can be especially useful when everyone in the home is feeling the impact of one person’s symptoms, when conflict escalates quickly, or when families want a healthier way to respond to stress together.

 

At ScienceWorks, family therapy may include improving communication, reducing blame cycles, strengthening boundaries, increasing mutual understanding, and building more effective ways to solve problems together. The goal is not perfection. It is helping the family system become more stable, more respectful, and more able to support growth for everyone involved.

 

Parent Management Training (PMT)

Parent Management Training teaches parents practical, evidence-based strategies for responding to challenging behavior in a more effective and sustainable way. PMT helps parents understand what triggers behavior, what reinforces it, and how to shift daily interactions so that boundaries are clearer, conflict is reduced, and more positive behavior is supported over time. This often includes learning how to respond more consistently, reduce escalation, use reinforcement more effectively, and create more workable routines at home.

 

At ScienceWorks, PMT is meant to support parents, not shame them. Parenting becomes much harder when stress is high, emotions run hot, or a child has complex needs. PMT provides concrete tools that can improve cooperation, lower family tension, and help parents feel more confident, more supported, and more effective in everyday life.

 

Finding the Right Treatment Approach

No single strategy is right for everyone, and not every treatment plan needs the same level of structure. Some people benefit from one focused modality, while others need a blended plan that addresses multiple concerns at once. During your consultation and intake, we help identify which treatment strategies are the best fit for your goals, your symptoms, and the life you are trying to build.

 

Ready to find the right approach? Schedule a free consultation and we’ll help you identify the treatment strategies that make the most sense for your needs.

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